The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, October 22, 2013 - 3 Th MihgnDiy-mciadiyomTedy coe 2 ,1 DETROIT Senators ask Kerry to prevent nuclear waste storage under Lake Huron U.S. Sens. Debbie Stabenow and Carl Levin of Michigan are asking Secretary of State John Kerry to intervene in a Canadian planto store nuclear waste under- ground near Lake Huron. Ontario Power Generation proposes a radioactive waste dis- posal facility at the Bruce nuclear power site in the city of Kincar- dine. If approved, it would house more than 200,000 cubic feet of waste about a mile from the lake. In a letter Monday to Kerry, the Democratic senators say they're concerned how storing so much radioactive material that close to the lake would affect the environ- ment and industries such as fish- ing and tourism. TRENTON, N.J Gov. Christie drops appeal to stop gay marriage law Gov. Chris Christie dropped his fight against gay marriage in New Jersey on Monday, fram- ing the decision in a pragmatic way: No point in fighting a losing battle. Just hours after gay couples began exchanging vows with the blessing of New Jersey's Supreme Court, Christie announced he was withdrawing his appeal to the high court. New Jersey is the 14th state to legalize gay marriage. As the Republican governor seeks re-election two weeks from now and ponders a run for presi- dent in 2016, Christie's decision holds both risks and benefits for him. SPARKS, Nev. Nevada middle school student kills teacher, wounds students Police say a Nevada middle school boy used a semi-automatic handgun to wound two students and kill a math teacher before turning the weapon on himself. The shooting occurred about 15 minutes before the opening bell at Sparks Middle School on Mon- day. The student's name wasn't released, and his motive for the shooting wasn't known. Teacher Michael Landsberry was being hailed as a hero for try- ing to protect children from their gun-wielding classmate outside the school. Twenty to 30 horrified students witnessed the shooting as they returned to classes from a weeklong fall break. CANBERRA, Australia Local Australian parliament allows gay-marriage A provincial parliament on Tuesday passed the first law allowing same-sex marriage in Australia, but it could be short- lived with the federal government threatening a court challenge. The Australian Capital Territo- ry parliament passed the law with the support of lawmakers from the province's governing Labor and Greens parties. All eight opposition Liberal Party law- makers in the 17-seat Legislative Assembly voted against the bill. The first marriages could take place in the national capital Canberra in December, but fed- eral Attorney General George Brandis, a member of the Liberal Party, said his government has legal advice that the legislation is invalid. Australian Capital Territory Chief Minister Katy Gallagher refused a request from Brandis to wait on allowing any same-sex marriages until the High Court ruled on the law's constitutional validity. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Leyland retires from position as Tigers manager ROB5GRIFFITH/AP Firefighters control flames along the roadside at Bilpin, 47 miles west of Sydney, Australia. Authorities have warned that hotter weather and increased winds are expected and are preparing for the conditions to worsen. Bus bombing sparks fear about SochiOly-mpics Suicide attack in Russia adds to security fears MOSCOW (AP) - A female suicide bomber blew herself up on a city bus in southern Russia on Monday, killing six people and injuring about 30, officials said. The attack in Volgograd added to security fears ahead of the Winter Olympics in Sochi. The suspected bomber was from the North Caucasus, a region in southern Russia where an Islamic insurgency has been simmering for more than a decade following two separatist wars in Chechnya. A local official said the suspect- ed attacker was married to an Islamic militant. Volgograd lies 650 kilome- ters (400 miles) to the north- east of the North Caucasus, while Sochi sits to the west along the Black Sea. No one immediately claimed responsibility for Monday's suicide bombing, but it was the first outside the North Cauca- sus since Chechen rebel leader Doku Umarov three months ago called for a resumption of attacks on civilians and urged militants to target the Sochi Games, which are to be held in February. Russia in past years has seen a series of terror attacks on buses, airplanes and other forms of transportation, some of them carried out by sui- cide bombers. The last suicide attack on a bus was in 2008. Twin bombings on the Mos- cow subway in March 2010 carried out by female suicide bombers killed 40 people and wounded more than 120. In January 2011, a male sui- cide bomber struck Moscow's Domodedovo Airport, killing 37 people and injuring more than 180. Umarov, who had claimed responsibility for the 2010 and 2011 bombings, ordered a halt to attacks on civilian targets because of the mass street protests against President Vladimir Putin in the winter of 2011-12. He reversed that order in July. The suspected bomber was from Dagestan, one of the pre- dominantly Muslim repub- lics in the North Caucasus, said Vladimir Markin, the spokesman for the Investiga- tive Committee, Russia's main investigative agency. In a statement, he identi- fied the suspect as 30-year-old Naida Asiyalova. Russian state television showed pictures of Asiyalova's passport. In Dagestan, the center of the insurgency, bombings and shootings occur almost daily. Most of them target law enforcement officers, not civil- ians. The Tsarnaev brothers, accused of carrying out the Boston Marathon bombings, have roots in Dagestan and Chechnya. Rasul Temirbekov, a spokes- man for the Investigative Com- mittee's branch in Dagestan, said the suspected bomber was married to an ethnic Russian, Dmitry Sokolov, whom she had met while both were university students in Moscow. She encouraged him to become a rebel, and he quickly gained a reputation as an expert in explosives, Temirbekov said. Sokolov, whose nom de guerre is Abdul Jabbar, has been on the run Temirbekov said that the suspected suicide bomber had a fatal bone illness. Video broadcast on state tossiya television showed that Monday's explosion occurred as the bus was moving in the far right lane of a divided six-lane road. The video, taken from a vehicle traveling behind the bus, showed a burst of flame and gray smoke. Fragments of what appeared to be window frames and other parts of the bus were left scattered across the road. When the bus came to a stop,. the video showed many passen- gers jumping out. Markin said seven people died, including the suicide bomber, and 33 asked for medi- cal assistance, 28of whom were hospitalized. Emergency offi- cials said about 40 people were on the bus. The local government on Monday placed security forces in the Volgograd region on high alert for 15 days. After eight seasons, Leyland moves on from Detroit, DETROIT (AP) - A picture of Jim Leyland's face stared out from the video board at an empty Comerica Park, next to that familiar Olde English "D" and a message thatsaid simply: "Thank You Jim." After eight seasons manag- ing the Tigers, including three division titles and two Ameri- can League pennants, Leyland stepped down Monday. His voice cracking at times, his hands wiping away tears at others, he announced his departure two days after Detroit was eliminated by Boston in the AL champion- ship series. . "It'sbeen a thrill," the 68-year- old Leyland said during a news conference at the ballpark. "I came here to change talent to team, and I think with the help of this entire organization, I think we've done that. We've won quite a bit. I'm very grateful to have been a small part of that." Leyland made his managerial debut with the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1986, and from Barry Bonds to Miguel Cabrera, he's managed some of the sport's biggest stars and been involved in some of baseball's most memorable games over the pastquarter-century. In 1992, his Pirates lost Game 7 of the NLCS whenAtlantarallied in the bottom of the ninth inning. Five years later, Leyland won his only World Series title as manag- er when his Florida Marlins beat Cleveland in an l-inning thriller in Game 7. He's experienced some of the highest highs the game has to offer, but also endured difficult rebuilding periods in both Pitts- burgh and Florida. After one season with the Colorado Rockies, Leyland didn't manage at all from 2000-05 before Detroit hired him. Leyland led the Tigers to the World Series immediately after taking over in 2006, los- ing to St. Louis in five games. The Tigers went to the World Series again in 2012 but were swept by San Francisco. Leyland worked under one- year contracts the last couple of years, saying he was content to wait until after the season to address his status. He was reflec- tive late this season, mentioning to reporters that he had already managed the Tigers longer than he had expected they would keep him, but he also said in Septem- ber that he still loved the atmo- sphere, the competition and his team. In fact, he'd actually told gen- eral manager Dave Dombrowski in early September that he didn't want to return as manager. He expects to remain with the orga- nization in some capacity after going 700-597 as Tigers manager. "I'm not totally retiring today, I'm just not going to be in the dugout anymore," Leyland said. "Ihope and pray that you give the next manager the same respect and the same chance that you gave me." Leyland says his health is fine, butit's time to stop managing. He said he started weighing his deci- sion around June. "I started thinking this was getting a little rough. I thought that the fuel was getting a little low," Leyland said. "I knew that I'd get through it because I knew we'd be playing for something." The Tigers figure to contend again next year, which may lead Dombrowski to look for a prov- en commodity who can come in and manage. Kirk Gibson, who led Detroit to the 1984 World Series title as a player, is now managing in Arizona, but Dia- mondbacks president Derrick Hall tried to quash any specula- tion that Gibson would return to the Tigers. "We would not grant permis- sion (to the Tigers to talk to Gib- son) if asked because we want him here, and he told me this morning he has no interest in leaving," Hall said. Detroit's players found out about Leyland's departure after Saturday night's game in Boston, where the Red Sox won Game 6 to take the series. "You've got your head down, you lost and the season's over, and then Jim dropped that bomb on us," outfielder Torii Hunter said. "I just had a feeling that it could have been his last year. All year, he was kind of emotional, and Ijust felt it." Leyland said there was no announcement Saturday because he wanted the focus to be on the victorious Red Sox. However, he was honest about how much this defeat hurt. "With all due respect to the Boston Red Sox - who earned it, they won it, they deserve to be where they are - I truly believe the Detroit Tigers should be playing here tomorrow," Leyland said. "This is one that's going to stick with me, this is one that really hurts, because I really felt like we letcit get away." When Leyland arrived at the Tigers' spring training camp this year, it marked 50 seasons since he first showed up there as an 18-year-old prospect. His play- ing career never amounted to much, but his accomplishments as a manager over more than two decades have been impressive. Thick smog persists in China, highways and schools shut down Pollution in China reaches an all time high, cause for concern BEIJING (AP) - Visibility shrank to less than half a foot- ball field and small-particle pollution soared to a record 40 times higher than an interna- tional safety standard in one northern Chinese city as the region entered its high-smog season. The manager for U.S. jazz singer Patti Austin, meanwhile, said the singer had canceled a concert in Beijing because of an asthma attack likely linked to pollution. Winter typically brings the worst air pollution to northern China because of a combina- tion of weather conditions and an increase in the burning of coal for homes and municipal heating systems, which usually starts on a specific date. For the large northern city of Harbin, the city's heating systems kicked in on Sun- day, and on Monday visibility there was less than 50 meters (yards), according to state media. "I couldn't see anything out- side the window of my apart- ment, and I thought it was snowing," Wu Kai, 33, a house- wife and mother of a baby boy, said in a telephone interview from Harbin. "Then I realized it wasn't snow. I have not seen the sun for a long time." She said her husband went to work in a mask, that he could barely see a few meters (yards) ahead of him and that his usual bus had stopped running. "It's scary, too dangerous. How could people drive or walk on such a day?" The density of fine particu- late matter, PM2.5, used as an indicator of air quality was well above 600 micrograms per cubic meter - including sever- al readings of exactly 1,000 - for several monitoring stations in Harbin, according to figures posted on the website of Chi- na's environmental protection agency. They were the first known readings of 1,000 since China began releasing figures on PM2.5 in January 2012, and it was not immediately clear if the devices used for monitor- ing could give readings higher than that. A safe level under WHO guidelines is 25 micrograms per cubic meter. Primary and middle schools and some highways were closed, said authorities in the city, which is in China's north- ernmost province bordering Russia. At least 40 flights to destinations in southern China and Beijing among others were canceled or postponed at Har- bin's Taiping International Air- port on Monday morning. Austin's management team said the 63-year-old singer had been treated in a hospital Friday morning for an asthma attack in combination with a respiratory infection. She returned to her hotel later Friday to rest, but was unable to perform at her Bei- jing concert scheduled for Friday evening. Her Saturday night concert in Shanghai went ahead. Her manager, Barry Orms, said Monday that Austin, as an asthma sufferer, would have been "affected by the amount of pollution." He said that it wasn't their goal to place blame, and that "Patti has expressed our belief that the Chinese government can be a leader in this very important issue." On the morning ahead of her concert Friday, Beijing's air was visibly polluted, with the city's environmental monitor- ing center warning children, the elderly and those with respiratory illnesses to reduce outdoor activity. China's major cities have some of the world's worst smog. The government was long indifferent to the environ- ment as it pursued economic development, but has begun launching some anti-pollution initiatives after mounting pub- lic frustration. Last month, China's Cabinet released an action plan that aims to make a small reduc- tion in the country's heavy reliance on coal to below 65 percent of total energy usage by 2017. According to Chinese gov- ernment statistics, coal con- sumption accounted- for 68.4 percent of total energy use in 2011. I