The Michigan Daily - michigandaily. NEWS BRIEFS com Tuesday, November 26, 2013 - 3 YPSILANTI, Mich. Police arrest two in shooting of EMU football player Police have arrested two peo- ple in the fatal shooting of East- ern Michigan University football player at an off-campus apartment complex, the Ypsilanti school announced Monday. One suspect was arraigned Sunday and the other was being arraigned Monday in the slaying of Demarius Reed, the university said. University President Susan Martin issued a statement thank- ing city and campus police investigators for their work "in identifying suspects in this tragic and senseless crime against a wonderful student and inspiring young man." ST. PAUL, Minn. Unlucky sibling of pardoned turkeys meets governor With two other turkeys ticket- ed for a presidential pardon at the White House, their brother met Minnesota's governor Monday at a state Capitol ceremony featuring much of the same upbeat pageant- ry ahead of a far gloomier fate for the bird. Jokingly dubbed "Delicious" by a farmer traveling with the 20-pound gobbler, the unfortu- nate turkey enjoyed only a brief stay of execution - not a reprieve - during a ceremony laced with gallows humor at Gov. Mark Day- ton's Capitol office. The next stop for the pink and white bird: a trip to the St. Paul Salvation Army and, eventually, dinner for the less-fortunate. Conversely, his two brothers are headed to the White House Wednesday where they'll be offi- cially spared. STOCKHOLM Swedish journalists abducted trying to leave Syria Two Swedish journalists were abducted in Syria as they were trying to leave the country, Swe- den's Foreign Ministry said Mon- day. The men were "taken" on Sat- urday as they were on their way out of Syria, spokeswoman Cata- rina Axelsson said. She declined to give other details, and said Swedish diplomats in Beirut were trying to get more information on the situation. The ministry didn't name them, but Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter said they were the news- paper's stringer in Paris, Magnus Falkehed, and a freelance photog- rapher, Niclas Hammarstrom. NICOSIA, Cyprus 1 Cyprus leaders halt reunification talks The rival leaders of ethnically divided Cyprus on Monday failed to agree on resuming stalled talks aimed at reunifying the country. Cyprus President Nicos Anas- tasiades and Turkish Cypriot leader Dervis Eroglu said after an informal meeting that obsta- cles remain in restarting full- fledged peace negotiations. "Unfortunately, there's still some way to go before we can arrive at the hoped-for result," Anastasiades said after emerg- ing from the three-hour meeting at a restaurant inside the United Nations-controlled buffer zone dividing the capital. Cyprus was split into an inter- nationally recognized Greek Cypriot south and a breakaway " Turkish Cypriot north in 1974 when Turkey invaded after a coup by supporters of union with Greece. Turkish Cypriots declared independence in 1983, but on Turkey, which maintains 35,000 troops there, recognize it. -Compiled from Daily wire reports FELLOWSHIP From Page 1 "As we lose those species, are we going to produce as much food and air and water? The answer appears to be no." Other distinguished research- PROTEST From Page 1 ought to be more aware of the factories that manufacture their maize-and-blue apparel. He added that students should not disparage the welfare of labor- ers outside U.S. borders. "If this was in the U.S., we wouldn't stand for it," Menhen- nick said. The die-in was one of several recent USAS events directed toward Coleman and students SMOKING From Page 1 rather than being told they were going to get cancer. Students noted that trying to quit could be more expensive than maintaining the habit, so the University offers smokers free patches, lozenges, gum and other consultations if they join a weekly smoking support group. The University also decided that enforcing the initiative should not be punitive, but rather rooted in changing social norms. In addition to posters, stenciled sidewalk chalk mes- sages appeared during Welcome Week and in smoker hotspots in the earlier months of the ban. University Police do not enforce the initiative and do not issue tickets to people smok- ing on campus. Instead, stu- dents can file a complaint about smokers at the Office of Stu- dent Conflict Resolution, while supervisors handle complaints from faculty and staff. "The principle that we went for was treating people with respect," Winfield said. "Not using law enforcement, trying to use social norms and social pressures and cultural pres- sures to get people to not smoke on campus and to consider quit- ting." ers studied innovations in chemi- cal and fuel production catalysts, the importance of social rela- tions while aging, cancer genet- ics, cells' signaling pathways and other topics. Cardinale said there were few more respected awards in his field. He added that he concerning the unsafe working conditions of factories in Ban- gladesh. Past events include a vigil commemorating the Rana Plaza collapse in April 2013 and Workout for Worker's Rights. A letter will be sent to Cole- man to brief her on the die-in event Menlo said. Coleman wrote a letter to Adidas in October 2012 express- ing concerns about the compa- ny's mishandling of severance payments for over 2,700 work- ers at a bankrupt supplier. In April of this year, Adidas A survey conducted in November 2012 demonstrates the effectiveness of those two years of research, as well as the decision to approach enforce- ment through a collective effort. The survey reported that the number of people who said they smoked dropped from six to four percent. Thirteen per- cent of faculty and staff said the initiative helped influence their decision or attempt to quit smoking. Despite these figures, LSA senior Jonathan Kang said he doesn't think the major- ity of students comply with or acknowledge the initiative. "A lot of people haven't taken into consideration that there's a smoking ban," Kang said. "I haven't really noticed a differ- ence since I was a freshman." Kang, who started smoking habitually two years ago, said that he usually respects the no- smoking policy, but most people don't care. "I think a lot of it's because it's not reinforced," Kang said. "I've never had anyone come up to me and say, 'hey, there's a smoking ban on campus, and you should put that out.' " In an effort to make this invisible social enforcement less transparent, Benz said the Uni- versity is developing a smoke- free ambassador program appreciates the recognition the award carries; the public and policymakers are now more apt to learn about Cardinale's dis- coveries. "These awards give you a plat- form to speak out to people you might otherwise be unable to speak to," Cardinale said. agreed to pay the employees the remaining severance pay they were entitled to. Menhennick said signing the accord is a small step in ensur- ing safe factory conditions worldwide. If manufacturers in Bangladesh sign the accord, others will follow. "Bangladeshi workers are endangered every single day when they enter their places of employment, and that's just unfair," Menlo said. "If we have the chance to change that, we should as a university." similar to the one at the Univer- sity of Kentucky. Ambassadors would hand out informational packets, toothbrushes and candy to on-campus smokers. Benz also said she is working with Central Student Govern- ment to develop a way to show students how to address some- one they see smoking on cam- pus. Smoking hotspots have also been a problem. Winfield iden- tified the Hatcher Graduate Library steps, the front of the Michigan League, an overhang on the side of the Michigan Union, the Duderstadt Center and the backside of Mary Mar- kley Residence Hall adjacent to the hospital as some areas where smokers frequent, but he did not provide a specific plan for eliminating them. These issues - as well as spit tobacco, snooze and e-ciga- rettes - will be receive greater attention after a new University president takes office, Winfield said. He noted that the momen- tum of initiatives to create a culture of health has been too strong to wane in the future. "This is going on all over the country, and I can't foresee any backing off," he said. "But this is not a good time to make any adjustments to the policy; the president's leaving in less than a year." BUCKEYES From Page 1 Monday morning, a day that the players usually have off, to kick off the biggest week of the year with intensity. The practice day seemed nec- essary, though, as there's still a laundry list of things Michigan needs to address before Satur- day. There's the offensive line that underwent its sixth personnel change on Saturday. There's Gardner who is not physically able to make the electric plays that were so common early in the season. And above all, there are the frequent negative play on offense. Hoke said all of that is man- ageable - it just comes down to consistency across the board. The Wolverines have loved the term "consistency" this sea- son. It has become the go-to buzzword, and the lack of it has become the explanation for offensive struggles. But the question remains whether or not consistency can be coached. Week in and week out, Hoke has started his press conferences saying he's been impressed with what he sees in practice that given week, yet game spasms still take over when it actually counts. According to the coaches and players, part of that seems to be not having all 11 players on the field on the same page. "No one's going to play a per- feet game," said senior corner- back Courtney Avery. "No one's going to have a perfect practice. In agame, hopefullyyou remem- ber the mistakes that you made and correct them. The key is to get as many guys playing as hard and as perfect as they can as pos- sible." It's no secret that the Wolver- ines have had difficulty putting points on the board through the month of November, and with Ohio State averaging 49 points a game, it's questionable if Michi- gan will have the offensive pro- duction necessary to even keep the game remotely close. But Hoke isn't worried about the point spread, or the fact that the Buckeyes are two games away from a second straight undefeated season. In fact, spoil- ing Ohio State's perfect record is the last thing on any of the Wol- verines' minds right now. "We talk about ourselves and what we have to do," Hoke said. "We've never, ever mentioned it, and I won't. That's not what it's about. It's about us playing our best football for our seniors and the greatest rivalry in sport." Hoke admitted that Ohio State is the best team Michi- gan will face all season. But he stands by his statement from the beginning of the season: that he likes his team and that there are still a few surprises. "I'm very confident it could happen, otherwise we wouldn't play," Hoke said. "I'd called down there to Columbus and say we won't do it." U.S. & Afghanistan continue to disagree over troop presence TRANSPORT From Page 1 for a dispatcher and the process of paying by cash or credit on site. "This is a piece of technology that no one has never done before and is going to revolutionize the way that people go out," Matian said. In the future, the duo plans to become a platform that con- nects passengers with drivers for hire, similar to car-hire app Uber, removing the finan- cial risk of having to buy more buses. Up to this point, Matian and Markowitz are extremely grateful for the support and resources of the University's Samuel Zell & Robert H. Lurie Institute for Entrepreneur- ial Studies, as well as that of startup competitions Dare to Dream, Lightning Pitch and Accelerate Michigan Innova- tion, all of which they compet- ed successfully in. "It's great knowing we have the support of the school," Matian said. Thailand prime minister institutes emergency law because of protests Security act will seal off roads, impose curfiews BANGKOK (AP) - Thailand's prime minister invoked an emer- gency law on Monday after dem- onstrators seekingto remove her from office occupied parts of the finance and foreign ministries. Prime Minister Yingluck Shi- nawatra announced that the Internal Security Act would cover all of Bangkok and large parts of surrounding areas. Three especially sensitive dis- tricts of the capital have been under the law since August, when there were early signs of political unrest. The law authorizes officials to seal off roads, take action against security threats, impose curfews and ban the use of electronic devices in designated areas. Peaceful rallies are allowed under the law. Protesters swarmed into the two government ministries earli- er Monday, overrunning several buildings and cutting electricity in an escalating campaign to top- ple Yingluck's government. Protesters say they want Yin- gluck to step down amid claims that her government is con- trolled by her brother, former Prime Minister Thaksin Shi- nawatra, who was ousted in a military coup in 2006 for alleged corruption. On Sunday, more than 150,000 demonstrators took to Bangkok's streets in the largestcrally Thailand has seen in years, uniting against what they call the "Thaksin regime." The incursions into the finance and foreign ministries were the boldest acts yet in opposition-led protests that started last month. They highlighted the movement's new strategy of paralyzing the government by forcing civil ser- vants to stop working. The opposition Democrat Party, which is spearheading the protests and has lost to Thaksin- backed parties in every election since 2001, also plans to chal- lenge the government Tuesday with a parliamentary no-confi- dence debate. "The protesters have escalat- ed their rally, which previously was a peaceful one," Yingluck said in a televised address. She said the government respect- ed the people's right to freely express opinions, but also had the responsibility to safeguard the country's peace and stability and assets, along with the safety of citizens and their right to access government offices. The law will cover the city's international airports. In 2008, anti-Thaksin demonstrators occu- pied Bangkok's two airports for a week after taking over the prime minister's office for three months. Protest leader Suthep Thaug- subanledthecrowdattheFinance Ministry on a day when protesters fanned out to 13 locations across Bangkok, snarling traffic and rais- ing concerns of violence in the country's ongoing political crisis, which has revolved around Thak- sin for years. "Go up to every floor, go into every room, but do not destroy anything," Suthep told the crowd before he entered the ministry and held a meeting in its confer- ence room. "Make them see this is peo- ple's power!" said Suthep, a for- mer deputy prime minister and opposition lawmaker. Protesters sang, danced and blew noisy whistles in the hall- ways as part of their "whistle- blowing" campaign against the government. One group cut power at the Budget Bureau to pressure the agencyto stop fund- ing government projects. Police made no immediate move to oust them. The protesters in the evening burst onto the Foreign Ministry grounds, which was not on their original list of targets. "The protesters are on the ministry's compound but they promised they will not enter the buildings," Foreign Ministry spokesman Sek Wannamethee said by phone. "We are now ask- ing them to provide ways for the officials who were still working to leave the offices and they will likely have to work from home tomorrow." He did not know how many protesters there were, though Thai media said there were several hundred. Karzai won't to sign pact, Rice says refusal means 2014 withdrawl KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - Afghanistan's president and the U.S. delivered blunt messages to each other Monday that gave no indication of a resolution of their disagreements over a pact that governs the future of the American troop presence in the country. Hamid Karzai said he won't back down from his refusal to sign during the rest of his term in office, with National Security Adviser Susan Rice responding that this would mean the U.S. would then start planning to pull out all its forces after 2014. Their meeting in Kabul came the day after Karzai's surprise decision to ignore Sunday's recommendation by an Afghan assembly of dignitaries to sign the Bilateral Security Agree- ment, a refusal that cast doubt on whether American and allied troops would remain in Afghanistan to train Afghan forces after most foreign troops withdraw next year. According to Karzai's office, he told Rice during Monday's meeting that he wouldn't back down from that decision, defer- ring it to whoever succeeds him as president in April elections. The White House said Rice responded by telling Karzai that the United States will plan to pull all troops out of his country after2014 if he doesn't promptly sign. It added that Rice told Karzai that a signed agreement is nec- essary to plan for thousands of troops to stay in the country to train and mentor Afghan secu- rity forces to face the Taliban. "President Karzai outlined new conditions for signing the agreement and indicated he is not prepared to sign the BSA promptly," the White House said. "Without a prompt sig- nature, the U.S. would have no choice but to initiate plan- ning for a post-2014 future in which there would be no U.S. or NATO troop presence in Afghanistan," she told the Afghan president. Karzai announced his deci- sion at a gathering of 2,500 tribal elders and regional lead- ers known as a Loya Jirga, even though the council not only overwhelmingly approved the deal after a four-day meeting but urged him to sign it by Dec. 31. Washington has asked him to change his mind. But the mercurial Karzai, in the meet- ing with Rice, says he laid out a series of new demands - albeit ones mostly involving steps the U.S. has already said it would take. One new demandwasthatthe United States should address a suggestion by the Loya Jirga that all Afghan prisoners be released from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. According to the statement, Karzai "said the United States of America should respond to the suggestion mentioned in the resolution of the Loya Jirga to free all the afghan prisoners in Guantanamo." There are nearly 20 Afghans currently being held at the American facility in Cuba. Karzai's office said that in the meetingwith Rice, he also asked for further assurances from the United States that its forces will not raid Afghan homes and that America express a sincere com- mitment to help start stalled peace talks with the Taliban. He also reiterated his demand that the United States commit to holding free and transparent elections on April 5. The statement further added that Karzai asked Rice to con- vey his concerns about the raids and peace talks to President Barack Obama so that he can "give assurances regarding the issues to the Afghan people." Obama has already addressed the issue of raids in a letter to Karzai last week that was read to the assembly. In it, Obama assured Karzai that under the agreement, the U.S. will continue to respect "Afghan sovereignty." He also said the U.S. military will not conduct raids on homes except under "extraordinary circum- stances" involving urgent risks to U.S. nationals. The US has repeatedly urged Karzai to sign a deal that would allow about 8,000 American troops to stay in the coun- try beyond a 2014 withdrawal deadline. The two-term Afghan leader has insisted that the winner of an April 5 election to succeed him should be the one to sign the deal. More than $8 billion in annual funds for Afghanistan's fledgling security forces and development assistance also are at stake. Karzai may be concerned about his legacy, worried he might be seen as responsible for an agreement that some Afghans will likely see as selling out to foreign interests. I