The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com. Thursday, November 17, 2011- 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, November17, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS HOUGHTON, Mich. Michigan Tech holds Elevator Pitch Competition Michigan Technological Uni- versity has handed out prizes topping out at $1,000 to students in its annual Bob Mark Memo- rial Elevator Pitch Competition. The Houghton school says students had three minutes to "their next great business idea to a panel of judges." The top prize of $1,000 top prize was awarded Monday to Travis Beaulieu and Joel Florek. They call their proposal Asfal- isMed, a business that would put people's medical informa- tion on wallet-sized identifica- tion cards. AsfalisMed also is a semifi- nalist in the statewide Accel- erate Michigan innovation competition taking place in Ypsilanti. David Shull is second place finisher and takes home $500. His business proposal is Picket, a textbook rental operation. SAN DIEGO Feds find drug tunnel linking San Diego to Tijuana An estimated 17 tons of mari- juana were seized in the dis- covery of a cross-border tunnel that authorities said Wednesday was one of the most significant secret drug smuggling passages ever found on the U.S.-Mexico border. The tunnel discovered Tues- day stretched about 400 yards (400 meters) and linked ware- houses in San Diego and Tijuana, authorities said. U.S. authorities seized about nine tons of marijuana inside a truck and at the warehouse in San Diego's Otay Mesa area, said Derek Benner, U.S. Immigra- tion and Customs Enforcement special agent in charge of inves- tigations in San Diego. Mexi- can authorities recovered about eight tons south of the border. WASHINGTON International space station gets three new crewmembers The International Space Sta- tion got three new crewmembers yesterday, temporarily doubling in crew size with the arrival of a Russian Soyuz capsule. The Soyuz TMA-22 delivered NASA astronaut Dan Burbank and Russians Anton Shkaplerov and Anatoly Ivanishin, who blast- ed off from Kazakhstan on Mon- day. They moved onto the station about two hours after their cap- sule successfully docked. The three newcomers were greeted with hugs and hand- shakes from American Michael Fossum, Russian Sergey Volkov and Japanese Satoshi Furukawa who have been at the station since June and are due to return to Earth next week. KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia Geckos smuggled due to claims of treating HIV virus Claims that a nocturnal Asian lizard can be used to help treat the HIV virus have led to a sharp boom in smuggling of the reptile, putting it at risk, a conservation group said Tuesday. Demand for the Tokay Gecko has skyrocketed in recent years after online blogs, newspa- per articles and wildlife trad- ers extolled the consumption of the lizard's tongue and internal organs as a miracle cure for HIV, TRAFFIC Southeast Asia said in a report. TRAFFIC said such claims were unfounded and "indicative of an elaborate hoax." The Phil- ippines' government in July also warned that using geckos to treat AIDS and impotence may put patients at risk. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Majority of baby boomers don't have living wills Students from University of california at Berkeley and other California colleges and Occupy San Francisco protesters march along the Embarcadero as part of a demonstration in San Francisco yesterday. Calif. UCOcpyprotests focus on education cuts 64 percent without health care powers of attorney WASHINGTON (AP) - Most people don't want to think about death, much less plan for it - especially when they feel healthy and young in their middle-age years. And that, some baby boomers say, is one of the big reasons so few of them have end-of-life legal doc- uments such asa living will. An Associated Press-Life- GoesStrong.com poll found that 64 percent of boomers - those born between 1946 and 1964 - say they don't have a health care proxy or living will. Those docu- ments would guide medical deci- sions should a patient be unable to communicate with doctors. "I'm very healthy for my age," said Mary McGee, 53, of Archbald, Pa. "So, death and dying isn't on my mind alot." McGee, a computer program- mer, exercises five to seven days a week, everything from aerobics to kickboxing, and her parents are alive and healthy. The same goes for 57-year-old Sandy Morgan in Richmond, Va. "You know when they say, 'Sixty is the new 40,' I really believe that," said Morgan, a retired teacher who is working part time for an executive search firm. Morgan's parents are still healthy intheir early 80s. She says she runs three miles a day twice a week, practices yoga twice a week and takes partin a rigorous fitness boot camp twice a week. End-of- life decisions aren't on her radar. "I just feel like it's something I'll probably think about in my late 60s or 70s," said Morgan. A living will spells out a patient's wishes for medical care if he or she is unable to communi- cate with doctors. The health care proxy, also known as a health care power of attorney, allows an individual to select a person he or she trusts to make decisions about medical care should the patient become incapacitated. Kathy Brandt said living wills and health care proxies are agood idea for everyone whether they are healthy and young or older and not so healthy. Brandt, a senior vice president at the National Hospice and Palli- ative Care Organization, said the two documents can spare fami- lies a painful fight and ensure that patients receive - or don't receive - the medical treatment they wish should they end up in a situation where they can't speak for themselves. The living will is not "all or nothing," said Brandt. A person could say he or she wants every- thing, something or nothing. For example, one person may want heroic measures taken to prolong life, while another may want to be resuscitated but decide against being dependent on breathing machines long-term. Brandt pointed to high-profile cases such as the Florida family fight over Terri Schiavo as a smart reason to draft a living will and health care proxy. At 26, Schiavo collapsed at her St. Petersburg home in 1990 with no end-of-life care instructions in writing. Her heart stopped and she suffered what doctors said was irreversible brain damage that left her in a permanent veg- etative state. Her husband said his wife would not have wanted to live in a vegetative state; her par- ents wanted her kept alive. Students pitch tents at Berkeley despite policy that forbids camping SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Police arrested a number of Occupy protesters and students yesterday who stormed into a downtown San Francisco bank and shouted slogans as they tried to set up camp in the lobby. The arrests came after more than 100 demonstrators rushed into a Bank of America branch, chanting "money for schools and education, not for banks and corporations." Police officers in riot gear cuffed the activists one-by-one as hundreds more demonstra- tors surrounded the building, blocking entrances and exits. Deputy Police Chief Kevin Cashman said 80 arrests were expected for trespassing. Sus- pects were taken to jail, cited and released. Elsewhere, students and anti- Wall Street activists settled into a new encampment at the Uni- versity of California, Berkeley, and visited the state Capitol to demand the restoration of fund- ing for higher education. At Berkeley, police watched over about two dozen tents that were pitched Tuesday night on a student plaza despite a cam- pus policy that forbids camping. Police warned that protesters could be arrested if they didn't leave. Seth Weinberg, a 20-year- old cognitive science major, said he slept in a tent on Sproul Plaza to press the university to lobby for more public educa- tion funding. "There should be a way for anyone who wants to go to col- lege if they choose to," Wein- berg said. "What the university doesn't understand is that we are not camping out. This is a constant protest." In Sacramento, about 75 stu- dent leaders and a few admin- istrators from UC Berkeley and the University of California, Davis lobbied lawmakers and the governor to allocate more money to education. Adam Thongsavat, stu- dent body president at UC Davis, called on lawmakers to be "more courageous, more aggressive and more thought- ful." "Come to our campuses and see how your actions affect us," he said. "I want you all to tell us why prisons deserve more spending than universi- ties." University of California President Mark Yudof issued a statement of support for the students' "passion and convic- tion" in support of public higher education. "We also suffer together the strains caused by what has been a long pattern of state disinvest- ment in the University of Cali- fornia," he said. Protesters in San Francisco marched through downtown in a demonstration partly orga- nized by ReFund California, a coalition of student groups and university employee unions. The group bused in protest- ers from UC Berkeley, the Uni- versity of California, Merced and other schools to join Occu- py San Francisco activists as they marched to the bank and the state building. The marches in support of higher education came as police in San Francisco and San Diego cleared encampments in those Millionaires on Capitol Hilask for higher taxes, Full Scale Gym, Yoga Studio, Sauna & Steam Rooms, Theat( 2 Hot Tubs, BBQ Grills, Study Lounges, Group Meeting SpacE Fully Furnished Luxury Apartments With In-unit Washer & Dry Located 3 Minutes from the Diag @ S. University & S. Forest Supercommittee hopes to cut $1.2 trillion before Thanksgiving WASHINGTON (AP) - Lob- byists for a day, a band of mil- lionaires stormed Capitol Hill yesterday to urge Congress to tax them more. They had a little trouble get- tingin. Itturns outthereare pro- cedures, even for the really rich. But once inside, their message was embraced by liberals and tolerated by some conservatives - including the ideological lead- er of anti-tax lawmakers, who had some advice for them, too. "If you think the federal gov- ernment can spend your money better than you can, then by all means" pay more in taxes than you owe, said Grover Norquist, the head of a group that has gotten almost all congressio- nal Republicans to pledge to vote against tax hikes. The IRS should have a little line on the form where people can donate money to the government, he suggested, 'just like the tip line on a restaurant receipt." In the silence left by the pri- vate efforts of the "supercom- mittee" to find $1.2 trillion or more in deficit cuts by Thanks- giving, free advice flowed in public. And not just any advice: pie- in-the-sky suggestions from those not connected to the talks, mostly to reopen debates that have led nowhere. The mil- lionaires want the panel to raise taxes on people who earn more than $1 million, even though most Republicans are commit- ted against the idea. And 150 House member and senators urged a much bigger debt-and- deficit deal, even as a small- scope agreement is proving elusive. While they were at it, the lawmakers insisted that bipar- tisanship was not, in fact, dead. This group of House mem- bers and senators shared a stage and some jokes and signed a let- ter urging the supercommittee of Republicans and Democrats to find the required $1.2 trillion in cuts - plus about $2.8 trillion more. They all want the panel to avoid triggering automatic cuts as a penalty for failing. "Congress working together," read posters behind the group. So this uneasy alliance of 150 Republicans and Democrats will vote for whatever deal the supercommittee strikes? "No," said House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer. "Nobody's going to commit to the deal until they see the deal." A