2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 16, 2004 r rn- NATION/WORLD 4 Love Your Laptop The new iBook G4 Thef b est laptopor st udents just got etter, ~~(Anc e p r, o.) 12.1"800 MHz G4 iBook with a Combo drive (DVD-ROM/CD- RW), 256 MB RAM, 30 GB Hard Disk, Airport Extreme Wireless Internet, and a 3-year warranty. Comes standard with Apple's super-secure OS X. Students save $314. $11330 While Supplies Last Exclusively available at the U-M Computer Showcase Michigan Union Ground Level 64-Sales http://www.itcs.umich.edu/sales City can't handle gay marriage requests SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Demand for same-sex marriage licenses has been so great that yester- day officials turned away hundreds of gay and lesbian couples lined up out- side City Hall, saying they simply did- n't have the time or resources to meet all the requests. San Francisco authorities calculated they could process 400 licenses during special weekend hours - but on Satur- day they granted 600 licenses and per- formed 270 weddings by late afternoon. Then officials gave numbers to 320 couples, securing them places in line for yesterday. After quickly distributing another 80 numbers yesterday morning, disap- pointed couples lined up around the block were asked to return today. "We're at capacity right now," said Mabel Teng, the official who over- sees marriage licenses for city gov- ernment. "We normally do about 20 to 30 couples a day. We're doing about 50 to 60 an hour." Many couples stayed in line despite instructions from city officials, hoping to receive numbers today. "It's a major disappointment," said Jill Kasofsky, 40, who had lined up with spouse-to-be Cynthia Juno, 45, at 8:15 a.m. after driving up from Los Angeles. "I'm thinking about coming back at midnight to sleep on the side- walk. I'm sure I won't be alone." Couples from even farther away said they were ready to stay in town for as long as it took. "Mentally, we came prepared to camp out if we had to," said Mike Fry, 43, who flew out Saturday from Min- neapolis with George Hamm, 44, his partner of 20 years. In a controversial challenge to both legal and social convention, San Fran- cisco officials began issuing same-sex licenses and officiating at City Hall marriages on Thursday. The city has gone out of its way to provide the services - City Hall is normally closed on Sundays. The decision prompted two conser- vative groups to press for court inter- vention. But on Friday a judge allowed the weddings to continue through the weekend. The issue returns to court tomorrow, when judges will hear separate requests from advocates of traditional marriage to void the licenses and order the city to stop giving them out. The two organizations argue that the licenses violate state law, which defines marriage as the union of a man and a woman. San Francisco officials counter that they are legally binding documents that take a swipe at discrim- ination against same-sex couples. NEWS IN BRIEF' S. j" -LLiE rRUM ..- .s.. * . N " w - * *tqwzLIJhl COLUMBUS, Ohio Shooting linked to 23 other Ohio attacks The day after the chief investigator said authorities were closing in on a serial highway shooter, a man stood in plain view on an overpass and fired a handgun at cars below. He then walked to his car and slipped into traffic. Ballistics testing has confirmed that the Saturday morning shooting was the 24th in a series in the Columbus area, investigators said yesterday. No one was injured in that shooting. The bullet recovered from the battery of a sport utility vehicle struck on Inter- state 70 matches eight others recovered during the investigation, including the one that killed a woman in November, according to a news release. The others have been linked by factors including location and circumstances. Experts said the shooter is becoming bolder after evading capture for three months, when authorities first established a pattern in the shootings. "He's sending a message to police: 'You're not as close as you think you are. I can shoot in broad daylight, and you still won't find me,' " said Jack Levin, a criminologist and director of the Brudnick Center on Violence at Northeastern University. BAGHDAD, Iraq Police capture No. 41 on Iraqi fugitive list A special Iraqi police unit arrested a senior Baath Party leader on the U.S. mili- tary's most-wanted list during a raid yesterday on his home in a Baghdad suburb. The capture of Mohammed Zimam Abdul Razaq leaves only 10 top figures still at large from the list of 55 issued after the Saddam Hussein regime fell. Abdul Razaq was No. 41, and the four of spades in the military's "deck of cards" of top fugitives. Deputy Interior Minister Ahmed Kadhum Ibrahim touted the arrest as evidence that the still-rebuilding Iraqi police force "can be depended upon in the fight against terrorism" - looking to give his troops a boost a day after police in the turbulent city of Fallujah were overwhelmed by dozens of gunmen in one of the best organized guerrilla attacks yet. U.S. officials gave conflicting reports yesterday on whether foreign fighters or Saddam loyalists carried out the bold, daytime assault on the Fallujah police station. At least 25 people, mostly police, were killed in the raid, more than 30 people were wounded and the attackers freed dozens of prisoners at the station. The assault raised questions about whether Iraqi security forces are ready to take the front line against the insurgency when the United States hands over power to the Iraqis on June 30. 4 f > SAN FRANCISCO Calif. leaders debate budget crisis plans California is quickly running out of cash and bracing for acute financial pain following three years of political procrastination and budget bungling. Now voters must decide if it makes more sense to approve a $15 billion bailout bond that might extend the mis- ery for a decade or more, or suffer it more intensely through temporary tax increases and deep spending cuts. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is trying to convince voters the bitter medicine should be dispensed gradually - that paying back the bailout bond over the next nine to 14 years is the most humane way for California to rehabilitate itself. His opponents say California will be making a terrible mistake if it shoulders long-term debt to solve short-term problems. In either case, it's clear the time has come for California to balance its checkbook. SEOUL, South Korea S. Korea to deploy 3,000 troops in Iraq Secretary of State Colin Powell expressed "deep appreciation" to South Korea's foreign minister in a phone call yesterday for the parliament's decision to send 3,000 troops to Iraq, the gov- ernment said. South Korea's National Assembly on Friday approved the deployment, the third-largest contribution to coalition forces after the United States and Britain. South Korea already has 465 medics and engineers in the southern Iraqi city of Nasiriyah. More South Korean troops are expected in the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk before the end of April. The deployment - likely to include special forces commandos and marines - will be responsible for secu- rity and reconstruction in the area. MOUNTAIN IRON, Minn. Chinese orders boost Minn. ining region Trainload after trainload of iron pellets rumble out of town, usually on their way to a U.S. steelmaker. But China's explod- ing steel demand has created a new mar- ket for U.S. ore and brought jobs back to Minnesota's struggling Iron Range, the center of U.S. iron ore mining. U.S. Steel's Minntac plant here is fir- ing up an idled ore production,'line to meet a 650,000 metric ton order by Shandong Taishan Iron and Steel Co. And in nearby Eveleth, Laiwu Steel bought a 30 percent stake in what had been a shuttered ore plant, under a part- nership with Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. The move put 385 people back to work in Eveleth, which had suffered layoffs at the mine and other companies. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 4 Presented by: i lo/oa sP,# ct (PRESS I From the mall store you love... Women's & Men's 13114 IN E30M IILIA P 11 I-I. PRICES STARTING A' Tops.........$6.9! Jeas....$12 9 Blazers..... $9.9 Shorts....... $9.9 WAR L f t_ & / I ' 9 9g 9 9 in the MIC IIGAN UNION BALLROOM 1 GOT CLOTHES US. army models The Michigan Dail " 'students at the Ui may be picked upE are $105. Winter affiliates are subji tLons must be prep 1) Press. ADDRESS:1 oy ] osm a editor to etters@ BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - As the NEWS United States military draws up long- 763.2459, new term plans to leave Iraq, top officers EDITORS: Jeremy B looking to the U. intervention in STAFF: Farayha Arrive,M are S. Fresand, Alison Go, Meg Bosnia's civil war as a model for an McCormack, Naila More American exit strategy here. OPINION The United States will keep combat 7630379, opliu ASSOCIATE EDITOR teams in Iraq for the next few years, STAFF: Benjamin Bass,I pulling them gradually out of cities into Andy Kula,Jessica Ris the countryside, and then perhaps into CRTOONSTS: SavyaB Kuwait and other countries. Eventually it Meziish, Ar Paul, ZacP will leave entirely, said Maj. Gen. SPORTS Charles H. Swannack, commander of 7r the U.S. Army's 82nd Airborne Division. NIGHT EDITORS: Josh H A slower version of this pullout plan Herbert,Brad ohnso"; is under way in Bosnia, with peace- Kyle O'Neill, Jake Rose keeping forces dwindling from 60,000 ARTS in 1995 to about 12,000 now. 763.0379, artsp EDITORS: Adam Ro "You have the 82nd Airborne Divi- SENIOR EDITOR, W sion that can jump in here to reinforce EDITORS, WEEKEN jump SUB-EDITORS: Andrew M. regional forces, or you have Marine STAFF: Jennie Adler, R offshore forces that can come in here anmeer Joel Hoard, I Evan Mcarvey, Vanes and reinforce for a while," Swannack Serilla, Jaya Soni, Anth said in an interview with The Associat- PHOTO ed Press. "That's what we have in 764.0563, phot Bosnia" ASSOCIATE EDITOR ASSISTANT EDITORS: Ja The military's two-year disengage- STAFF: Trevor Campbell, ment plan could be upended by any O'Donnell, Al"Olsen,S p p b any GRAPHICS DESIGN STAFF number of events in Iraq. Civil war ONLINE between its ethnic and religious groups 763.2459, onlin might prolong the occupation, or it could STAFF: Bethany Dykstr be shortened by the election of an Iraqi government that orders the Americans . out, said Anthony Cordesman, a military DISPLAY S analyst with the Center for Strategic and 764.0554, disph International Studies in Washington. ASSOCIATE MANA( WWW.MICHIGANDAILY.COM y (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by niversity of Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail term (January through April) is $110, yearlong (September through April) is $190. University ect to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscrip- paid. 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