100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

November 21, 2013 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 2013-11-21

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

6A - Thursday, November 21, 2013

The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com

fiA - Thursday, November 21, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom

Auto manufacturers
plan to mass market
hydrogen vehicles

Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn, center, signs the state's Religious Freedom and Marriage Fairness Act into law in Chicago.
After lengthy debate, Iino is governor
signs same-sex marriage legislation

State becomes 16th
nationally to pass gay
marriage law
CHICAGO (AP) - Illinois
Gov. Pat Quinn signed legislation
Wednesday allowing same-sex
weddings starting this summer,
making President Barack Obama's
home state the 16th overall - and
largest in the nation's heartland
- to legalize gay marriage.
The festivities at the Universi-
ty of Illinois at Chicago featured
a family-friendly crowd, musical
performances and a stage lined
with American, Illinois and rain-
bow flags.
"We understand in our state
that part of our unfinished busi-
ness is to help other states in the
United States of America achieve
marriage equality," Quinn said
before he signed the bill on a desk
once used by President Abraham
Lincoln. He said part of that mis-
sion was to ensure that "love is
not relegated to a second class
status to any citizen in our coun-
try."

Detroit dealers
set to release new
consumer concept
models
DETROIT (AP) - Cars that
run on hydrogen and exhaust
only water vapor are emerging
to challenge electric vehicles
as the world's transportation of
the future.
At auto shows on two conti-
nents Wednesday, three auto-
makers unveiled hydrogen fuel
cell vehicles to be delivered to
the general public as early as
next spring.
Hyundai Motor Co. will be
the first to the mass market in
the U.S. It unveiled a hydrogen-
powered Tucson small SUV
at the Los Angeles Auto Show
that will be leased to consum-
ers. Honda also revealed plans in
Los Angeles for a car due out in
201S. Earlier, at the Tokyo Motor
Show, Toyota promised a mass-
produced fuel cell car by 2015 in
Japan and 2016 in the U.S.
Hydrogen cars are appealing
because unlike electric vehi-
cles, they have the range of a
typical gasoline car and can be
refueled quickly. Experts say
the industry also has overcome
safety and reliability concerns
that have hindered distribution
in the past.
But hydrogen cars still have
a glaring downside - refueling
stations are scarce, and costly
to build.
Consumers can expect costs
in line with some luxury mod-
els. In Tokyo, Toyota promised
a price of $50,000 to $100,000,
and as close to the lower figure
as possible. That's comparable
to its Lexus luxury sedans, but
a range that makes the once
space-age experiment with fuel
cells more credible.
Hyundai said it will lease the
Tucsons for $499 per month for
three years with $3,000 down.
And Hyundai is offering to pay
the hydrogen and maintenance

References to freedom, equal-
ity, fairness and Lincoln - the
desk was where he penned his
1861 inaugural address - were
peppered throughout the event.
In attendance were top elected
officials, including Illinois Attor-
ney General Lisa Madigan and
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel.
Organizers estimated roughly
2,300 attended, including activ-
ists and members of the public.
Illinois, where Democrats lead
both legislative chambers and the
governor's office, legalized civil
unions in 2011, but the road to
same-sex marriage was bumpy.
When 2013 began advocates
hoped Illinois would've been the
10th state, but watched as other
states passed it. Gay marriage is
allowed in Washington D.C., and
15 other states; Hawaii's governor
signed a measure last week.
Even with support from top
business leaders, unions and
some Republicans, several law-
makers were resistant to the idea.
That included some Democrats
in more conservative downstate
Illinois and some Chicago-area
lawmakers.

The measure was fought
hard by some of the state's most
well-recognized religious fig-
ures, including Cardinal Francis
George of theArchdiocese of Chi-
cago and the Rev. James Meeks,
a former state senator who runs
a politically-influential mega
church in Chicago. Meeks was
part of a coalition of black pastors
who said marriage should remain
between a man and woman and
sponsored robocalls in several
legislative districts and on the
airwaves. The opposition placed
black lawmakers in the House
in a spotlight and several evaded
public inquiries on the matter for
months.
Although Illinois once
appeared poised to become the
first Midwestern state to approve
gay marriage in the Legislature,
Minnesota did it sooner and
started holding its first same-sex
weddings over the summer. Iowa
allows gay marriages too because
of a court ruling, not a legislative
vote.
The Illinois Senate approved
the measure on Valentine's Day,
but the bill's main sponsor, Dem-

ocratic state Rep. Greg Harris of
Chicago decided against calling
it for a vote in the House because
he said he didn't have the needed
support. In a tearful speech in
front of his colleagues, he vowed
to bring the measure back.
Proponents then launched
another aggressive campaign
with help from labor, the former
head of the Illinois Republican
Party and the ACLU. They billed
the measure as a matter of civil
rights and equality for fami-
lies. Quinn and House Speaker
Michael Madigan also persuade
lawmakers in the final days.
The measure passed the Illi-
nois House earlier this month by
a narrow margin 61-54; It needed
60 votes to pass. But none of the
opposition or slim margin was
evident Wednesday at the event
where the Chicago Gay Men's
Chorus performed and Lincoln's
desk was lined with patriot bun-
ting.
"We're here to celebrate, fam-
ily, commitment, equality, love,
courage and community," Har-
ris told the crowd to enthusiastic
applause.

costs. The company will start
leasing in the Los Angeles area,
where most of the state's nine
fueling stations are located.
California lawmakers have
allocated $100 million to build
100 more. Honda wouldn't
reveal any pricing details.
Evenas battery-powered and
hybrid-electric cars took on
conventional gasoline models
in the past decade, automakers
continued research into hydro-
gen fuel cells, said Paul Mutolo,
director of external partner-
ships for the Cornell Univer-
sity Energy Materials Center.
Manufacturers now are limited
only by costs and the lack of
fillingstations, he said.
Hydrogen cars, Mutolo
said, have an advantage over
battery-powered electric cars
because drivers don't have to
worry about running out of
electricity and having to wait
hours for recharging. "It's very
similar to the kind of behav-
ior that drivers have come to
expect from their gasoline
cars," he said.
Hydrogen fuel cells use a
complex chemical process to
separate electrons and protons
in hydrogengas molecules. The
electrons move toward a posi-
tive pole, and the movement
creates electricity. That powers
a car's electric motor, which
turns the wheels.
Since the hydrogen isn't
burned, there's no pollution.
Instead, oxygen also is pumped
into the system, and when it
meets the hydrogen ions and
electrons, that creates water
and heat. The only byproduct is
water. A fuel cell produces only
about one volt of electricity, so
many are stacked to generate
enough juice.
Hydrogen costs as little as $3
for an amount needed to power
a car the same distance as a gal-
lon of gasoline, Mutolo said.
Manufacturers likely will
lose money on hydrogen cars at
first, but costs will decrease as
precious metals are reduced in
the fuel cells, Mutolo said.

Call: #734-418-4115
Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com

Suspect in shooting of
journalist arrested

RELEASE DATE- Thursday, November 21, 2013
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
ACROSS 5 Brief missions? 42 "The Lady & Sons 55 Honshu port
1 "Are you 6 Hi and Lois's SavannabCounty56Admittothe
serioas?" daagbter Cookbook"'authar club
5 Handicapper's 7 Foreboding Paula 57 Twisty-homed
concern 8 Cupboard 43 Stylebook subect antelope
9 Cass m arrangement 48 Stali and SKYY 58Admiting a
14 Doth possess 9 Officers-to-be 49 Tar Heel State breeze, perhaps
15 Los Angeles, for 10 Floral wreath campus 59 "Frasier" actress
one 11 Word-of-mouth 51 Egyptan amulet Gilpin
16 High nest 12 Riesling product 53 Solutionfor 4- 60 Shangri-la
17 Opposed party 13 Aid factor Down 64 Press coverage
18 *Filet mignon dish 19Grow together 542010 Supreme 65 Make haste
named for a 21 Rock-filled Court appointee 66 Uno edue
goddess 25 lt can be viewed
2Jetsoands with ascanning ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
22Proactivtarget tunneling S A L A D S A L K E G A D
23 Was in the microscope E LOPE CLUE L 0 R E
vanguard 6 2Colamnstyle A D C A M P A I G N MOT T
24 Emergency 29 Paranormal A C M A GS M T
supplies ability B E A OUR S T R 1 D E R
27 Dog in Baum 30Tip for a croupier A N T S B A H A R O M A
stories 31lLarge gulp STOLE B A N K P A N I C
28Dangerousfly 32Prefixwith S E R A P E P C I E S T
33 Puffin kin skeleton W I L L P O W E R
36 izable msic 33lBook afer John mILLP0RCS
combo 34 River through S H C K 0 I I S O B A R
39 Planted Orsk P 0 R K B E L L Y P O L I 0
40Troubledyouth 35Broccolirelative A M A N A Y A M F A R M
literallyhiding in 37 Pre with R I S O T T O N A B S P A
each answer to a skeleton K N I T B A C K B U T T N
starred clue 38 Metronome L I N T S H U E C H E R I
44 Fable settings
45 Makes the scene 41 Prize EDGY PURE SERTA
461 trouble? component? xwordeditor@aol.com 11/21/13
47Slob'snapkin 1 2 3 4 5 6 0 7 8 10oi ri13
50 Spheres studied
by Mendel 14 15s 1
52 Pipe-smoking
royal 17 18 19
S8 Tailless primate
01 Eplorer on Nick a 21 22 2
Jr. 24 25 26
62 Artsupport
63 *Fictional rank 2728 9 0 3 3
above Padawan
67Pro_ 33 ana 3 en6 no 38 39
68 Where the action
69 Pormer Neet rival446
70 Similar
71 Face-off locales 47 4 49 en e
72 Low joint
73 Wings, for s2 534 55 56 57
instance
DOWN an 65 65 66 60
1 Mar ructure
2 Ho Chi Minh 68 9 70
Mausoleum city
3 Rose essence 71 72 73
Down By MaryEen Uthlaut 1
(c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

! NORTH CAMPUS 1-2 Bdrm. !
! Riverfrnt/Heat/Water/Parkilg.!
! www.HRPAA.com 996-4992 !
!! 715/721 CHURCH - CENTRAL
CAMPUS!! Available Fall 2014, 1
bedroom apartments. Just one block
from South University, near the b-
school. Large bedrooms/living rooms.
Free heat/water/parking!
www.churchstreetrentals.com
734-320-1244. cimgtllc yahoo.com
ARBOR PROPERTIES
Award-Winning Rentals in Kerrytown,
Central Campus, Old West Side,
Borns Park. Now Rentiog for 2014.
734-994-3157. www.arborprops.com
BEST HOUSE FALL 2014! Central
Campus, by Bus. /Law School. 702 Tap-
pan, 5 BR, $3,550/mo. 240 332-4444
THE 2ND FLOOR
NEW Luxury Apartments,
Right on S. U. / Central Campus.
Apartments come with the BEST
Service, Amenities and All at
REASONABLE RATES
www.The2ndFloorSU.com
UNIVERSITY TOWERS
*NOW TAKING RESERVATIONS*
Rent a FULL 2 bedroom w/ FREE
HEAT as low as $1629.00. Great Loca-
tion, Great Service and Great RATES!!
www.universitytowers-mi.com
734-761-2680
HELP WANTED
GEOMETRY OR SPANISH Tutor
Needed for 9th grader. $20/Hour. Flexi-
ble hours. Email nseyhun@umich.edu.
LOCAL ANN ARBOR Restaurant
seeking MANAGERIAL help. Please
seod resume to PO. Bo 468 Chelsea,
MI 48118
WWW.STUDENTPAYOUTS.com
Paid survey takers oeed in A2.
100% FREE to joio. Click oo Surveys.

THESIS EDITING. LANGUAGE,
vrganizution, formauL All Disciplioes.
734 996-0566 or writeon@iserv.net
ZARAGON PLACE 619 E University
4 Bedroom Apartments; 2 Bath
Price: $1,125 per mooth
Feature: Wshr/dryer io unit, folly fur-
nished, wifi, 43" flat screen tv included
Contact: 734-786-3890
Link: cribspot.com/listing/2860
ZARAGON WEST 401 Thompson
2 BedroomApartments; 2 Bath
Price: $1,350 per month
Features: Washer & dryer in unit, fully
furnished, WiFi included
Contact: 73-786-380

DNA evidence links
single suspect to
Monday's attack
PARIS (AP) - After a two-day
nationwide manhunt, French
police arrested a man Wednes-
day night suspected of shooting
a newspaper assistant photogra-
pher and three other attacks.
The motive for the attacks
remains unclear.
Interior Minister Manuel
Valls identified the suspect as
Abdelhakim Dekhar, convicted
in 1998 as an accomplice in a
high-profile 1994 robbery and
car chase that left three police
officers and a taxi driver dead.
Dekhar served four years in
prison in the so-called Rey-
Maupin affair but authorities
had no trace of him in recent
years, Valls said.
Based on DNA data, authori-
ties believe he was the lone
gunman behind Monday's
shooting at the prominent
daily newspaper Liberation,
a shooting outside French
bank Societe Generale, a brief
hostage-taking in which the
suspect hijacked a car, and a
similar shooting incident three
days before at news network
BFM-TV.
The shooting prompted cries
of concern about attacks on the
media. Security was tightened
at media offices and on the busy
Champs-Elysees shopping ave-
nue.
Dekhar apparently tried
to kill himself before he was
arrested Wednesday, Valls told
reporters early Thursday.
Agnes Thibault-Lecuivre, a
spokeswoman for the French
prosecutor's office, said the
suspect was arrested in an
underground parking lot in
Bois-Colombes, 10 kilometers

(6 miles) north of Paris. She and
police union official Christophe
Crepin said the man appeared
heavily medicated when he was
detained.
"My colleagues noticed
he was not very lucid. They
deduced that he had taken
medicines, because of the cap-
sules nearby. They called the
ambulance, which brought
him to the hospital. There he
is incarcerated but in a medical
environment," Crepin told The
Associated Press.
Dekhar was found after a
witness reported to police that
a suspect resembling images
broadcast on national televi-
sion since Monday had stayed
at his house in recent days,
said Paris judicial police chief
Christian Flaesch.
Authorities had released
video footage and photos of
the shooter, who was wielding
a pump-action shotgun in the
attacks on Liberation and BFM.
The gunman entered the
lobby of Liberation around
10 a.m. Monday and opened
fire. A 23-year-old photogra-
pher, who works at the paper
as a freelance assistant, was in
intensive care after being shot
near the heart and in the arm.
Valls said he visited the pho-
tographer Wednesday and he's
"doing better."
Soon after the shooting at
Liberation, three shots were
fired in front of the head-
quarters of the bank Societe
Generale in the Paris suburb of I
La Defense. No one was hurt.
Less than an hour later, a
man called police to say he had
been taken hostage by a gun-
man in the town of Puteaux,
next door to La Defense. Police
said the gunman forced his
hostage to drive six kilometers
(3 1/2 miles) back toward cen-
tral Paris, then let him go on
the Champs-Elysees.

i

I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan