The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, October 8, 2014 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, October 8, 2014 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. Invasive Asian carp found in the Kalamazoo River Genetic material from Asian carp has been found in the Kalamazoo River in southwestern Michigan, but there's no indication the invasive fish have become established in the river that flows into Lake Michigan, officials said Tuesday. DNA from silver carp was detected in one of 200 water samples taken in July from the river in Allegan County, this one from below the Caulkins Dam about 24 miles from Lake Michigan, the state Department of Natural Resources and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said. The discovery marks the first time so-called environmental DNA for silver carp has been found in Michigan's Great Lakes waters outside of Maumee Bay in Lake Erie. The term "environmental DNA" refers to genetic markers that fish leave behind as they move through waters, shedding scales, mucous or excrement. BOISE, Idaho Appeals court rules same-sex marriage legal in Idaho A federal appeals court declared gay marriage legal in Idaho and Nevada on Tuesday, a day after the U.S. Supreme Court effectively legalized same-sex marriage in 30 other states. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco struck down the two states' bans on gay marriage, ruling they vio- lated equal protection rights. "This is a super sweet vic- tory," said Sue Latta, who along with Traci Ehlers sued Idaho last year to compel the state to recognize their 2008 mar- riage in California. Three other couples also joined the lawsuit to invalidate Idaho's same-sex marriage ban. "Taxes are easier, real estate is easier, parenting is easier, end-of-life planning is easier," Latta said. DALLAS Texas Ebola patient visited by parents, Rev. Jesse Jackson The family of a man diag- nosed with the first U.S. case of Ebola again visited him at the hospital Tuesday but declined to view him via video the last time had been too upsetting. Relatives of Thomas Eric Duncan glimpsed him using a video system at Dallas' Texas Health Presbyterian Hospi- tal on Monday. But when they returned anew, this time with Rev. Jessie Jackson, they decid- ed such images were too much. "What we saw was very pain- ful. It didn't look good," said Duncan's nephew, Josephus Weeks. Weeks said he and Duncan's mother were unable to sleep after seeing Duncan's face. HONG KONG Democratic protests calm as talks with government start Crowds of protesters who filled Hong Kong's streets with demands for more democracy thinned dramatically Tuesday after student leaders and the government agreed to hold talks in the increasingly frustrated city. The government and students leaders announced they will begin talks on political reform on Friday. But while a govern- nient representative said negoti- ations were off to "a good start," the students expressed anger S and disappointment at officials' daunwillingness to address their real demands. -Compiled from Daily wire reports SNYDER From Page 1A Michigan a truly special place is not one area or sectors, it is the humanity of the University, the people," Snyder said in his speech. In the same month, Snyder also toured the MHacks expo to see projects created by inno- vative students from all areas of campus, including various mobile apps, a robotic arm and. software that analyzes the mood in speeches. The University's chapter of College Republicans is one of the largest organizations that supports Snyder's actions in the state and the University and has been working for his reelection this fall. LSA senior Gabriel Leaf, chairman of the University's chapter of College Republicans, said he believes the biggestcreason why students believe in Snyder are because of his job-creating policies. A major platform of Snyder's 2010 campaign was creating jobs and stimulating Michigan's economy, earning him the title of "one tough nerd." Since tak- ing office in January 2011, the state has created approximately 300,000 new private sector jobs and the administration has overseen the sixth-fastest growing economy in the nation - though there is significant debate about how much Sny- der's policies have contributed to the economic growth. Leaf said the hardest posi- tion a student finds themselves in after graduation is the task of actually finding a job and enter- ing the workforce, a problem he believes Snyder understands and wants to simplify. "He understands where they're coming from, he under- stands their background," Leaf said. "He's been what we've been through." Members of the College Republicans and other stu- dents have been helping galva- nize voters to support Snyder through the student group Wolverines For Rick. Though Leaf acknowledges the city's liberal reputation, he fully believes in Snyder's core issues and is diligently working to "do all he can" for Snyder's reelection in these final weeks. "It is hard trying to get a Republican basis here in the heart of Ann Arbor, Washt- enaw county as it is very lib- eral," he said. "So there isn't as much support as he would like to see here, but there definitely is some here." CUPS From Page 1A to on-campus coffee shops and upload a picture of their cups to KillTheCup.com. After uploading the pictures, participants are eli- gible to receivea prize. After calculating the results, KillTheCup.com uses prizes and gift cards as incentives to encourage student participation. After the end of the campaign, the teams who achieve the high- est participation will be eligible to receive a $5,000 grant to start and fund their personal sustain- ability project. Along with this grand prize, four weekly prizes of $50 and one iPad will be awarded for each individual campus. Drew Beal, co-founder of SVS, said he- likes to view the organization as a "social enter- prise" because of the combina- tion of social and environmental impacts. Beal said he hopes stu- dents, faculty and staff will gain a general awareness of the impor- tance of sustainability that can result ina daily habit. "They can learn that little adjustments to daily routine col- lectively, can have a huge impact on the environment," Beal said. Along with encouraging con- sumers to reuse coffee cups as a daily routine, Beal hopes that the Kill the Cup campaign will construct a new norm on college campuses across the country. "If we can really celebrate the fact that more and more people are getting coffee in a reusable cup on a specific campus, then it will help establish a social norm within that university," Beal said. , Beal and Mike Taylor, co- founder of Kill the Cup, started the program while in graduate school at the University of Cali- fornia, San Diego in 2013. They piloted the program last year at UCSD and decided to expand their outreach after an estimat- ed 1,300 disposable coffee cups were saved, which translates to approximately 80 pounds of land- fill waste. "Not only were people bringing their own cup more frequently and there was a lot of excitement around sustainability, but the cof- fee shops we worked with also were more profitable," Beal said. Beal and Taylor implemented a four-week program at George- town University in the fall of 2013 to compare and validate their initial findings. Georgetown's results were also positive, which resulted in Taylor and Beal pursu- ing this campaign into SVS. Public Policy senior Kayla Ulrich, co-director of Kill-A-Watt at the University, said Beal con- tacted her and LSA senior Natalie Stevenson, co-director of Kill-A- Watt, and explained the details of the competition and the mission of SVS. Ulrich said this competi- tion would expand the current sustainability movement at the University and "bring something new and fun to campus." While there are many different sustainability efforts on campus, Ulrich said Kill the Cup is dif- ferent than others because the results are concrete since Kill the Cup's focus is waste reduction. "Because we are talking about cups, I think that it is a lot more relevant and more tangible. Peo- ple will be ableto relate to it much better," Ulrich said. Islamic State fighters closing in on Syrian town FERGUSON From Page 1A efforts of students to stop "rac- ist police acts against minority youth." Assembly members dis- cussed amendments to the res- olution extensively and, though each proposed amendment passed, the resolution was still voted down, with dissenting voters noting the language as being generally too extreme and overreaching. The resolution presented to CSG was submitted at 4:54 p.m. Tuesday, two days after the deadline to submit resolu- tions and did not include pre- vious amendments made and passed by CSG in prior weeks. Those amendments were added and the updated resolution wdl presented to CSG and voted on. Among those voting yes for this resolution, LSA senior Michael Chrzan, School of Education representative, said though the resolution was flawed, it was his belief that the CSG body should still have sup- ported the amended resolution. "Obviously there were ways that it could have been improved," Chrzan said, "It did not have to be a perfect resolu- tion and I think that this reso- lution fit the bill enough that it could have been passed. There were no extreme generaliza- tions or inaccuracies and as a person who has lived experi- enced like these, I will say it is disappointing." Stephen Richards said, as the representative of the School of Social Work, he advocates for social justice and believes in this cause and the values set forth in the resolution. "It is fact that these things do happen to people of color," Richards said. "I do under- stand that this assembly is not a majority of people of color and do not have these personal experiences, but all of us do have experiences with these sorts of things. It is hard to rec- oncile the fact that these things do happen in our communi- ties." Members from By Any Means Necessary responsible for recent protests on cam- pus this month and earlier' this year were in attendance. BAMN Organizer David Doug- lass asked CSG to colnsider the opportunity their resolution presented for minority stu- dents on campus to be involved in the Ferguson movement as leaders for campuses across the country. "We are in a very impor- tant historic window. We can make history tonight and stand against this racist murderer," Douglass said, referring to Wilson. "Students come here because they expect to be a part of a diverse, integrated student body, but they are met with the reality of a segregated and white student body." Members who voted for the resolution said they hope to continue to address this issue and develop and present a new resolution in the future. Kurdish troops work to expel extremists along Thrkish border MURSITPINAR, Turkey (AP) - Islamic State fighters were poised to capture a stra- tegic Syrian town on the Turk- ish border, Turkey's president warned Tuesday, even as Kurd- ish forces battled to expel the extremists from their footholds on the outskirts. The outgunned Kurdish fight- ers struggling to defend Kobani got a small boost from a series of U.S.-led airstrikes against the militants thatsenthuge columns of black smoke into the sky. Lim- ited coalition strikes have done little to blunt the Islamic State group's three-week offensive, and its fighters have relentlessly shelled the town in preparation for a final assault. Warning that the aerial cam- paign alone was not enough to halt the Islamic State group's advance, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called for greater cooperation with the Syrian opposition, which is fighting both the extremists and forces loyal to Syrian Presi- dent Bashar Assad. "Kobani is about to fall," Erdogan told Syrian refugees in the Turkish town of Gazian- tep, near the border. "We asked for three things: One, for a no- fly zone to be created; Two, for a secure zone parallel to the region to be declared; and for the moderate opposition in Syria and Iraq to be trained and equipped." Erdogan's comments did not signal a shift in Turkey's position: He has said repeatedlythat Anka- ra wants to see a more compre- hensive strategy for Syria before it commits to military involve- ment in the U.S.-led coalition. Turkish tanks and other ground forces have been sta- tioned along the border within a few hundred yards of the fight- ing in Kobani, also known as Ayn Arab, but have not inter- vened. And while Turkey said just days ago that it wouldn't let Kobani fall, there's no indica- tion the government is prepared to make a major move to save it. Since mid-September, the militant onslaught has forced some 200,000 people to flee Kobani and surrounding villag- es, and activist say more than 400 people have been killed in the fighting. It has also brought the violence of Syria's civil war to Turkey's doorstep. Capturing Kobani would give the Islamic State group, which already rules a huge stretch of territory spanning the Syr- ia-Iraq border, a direct link between its positions in the Syr- ian province of Aleppo and its stronghold of Raqqa, to the east. It would also give the group full control of a large stretch of the Turkish-Syrian border. Syrian Kurds scoffed at the rhetoric coming out of Ankara. They say that not only are the Turks not helping, that they are actively hindering the defense of Kobani by preventing Kurd- ish militiamen in Turkey from crossing the border into the town to help in the fight. "We are besieged by Tur- key, it is not something new," said Ismet Sheikh Hassan, the Kurdish defense chief for the Kobani region. Relations between Turkey and Syria's Kurds have long been strained, in large part because Ankara believes the Kurdish Democratic Union, or PYD - the leading Syrian Kurdish politi- cal party - is affiliated with the Kurdish PKK movement that has waged a long and bloody insur- gency in southeast Turkey. In towns across Turkey, Kurdish protesters clashed with police Tuesday, while Kurdish demonstrators forced their way into the European Parliament in Brussels - part of Europe-wide demonstrations demanding mor help for the besieged Kurdish militiamen struggling to defend Kobani. Turkish news agencies say least at 14 people have died and scores were injured in clashes between Turkish police and Kurdish protesters. Despite Erdogan's dire assessment of the battle for Kobani, the front lines were largely stable despite heavy clashes Tuesday. Kurdish forces managed to push back Islamic State mili- tants from some neighbor- hoods on the eastern edges of town, hours after the extrem- ists stormed into the areas, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. Still, two black jihadi flags fluttered from a building and a small hill on the eastern FOLLOW OUR WRITERS ON TWITTER! @JENCALFAS @WRGREE @PETERSHAHIN @GGARNO @JEREMYSUMMITT @REALGABYVASQU EZ @RRPRE FOLLOW US: @MICHIGANDAILY ' GERALD R. FORD SCHOOL OF PUBLIC POLICY UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 11 f Thmuig.wawomenvarcx znwgWbwP.nXf.lorgaror.60 a 4