LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 19, 2004-- 5A Dow plan for dioxin cleanup submitted SAGINAW (AP) - Dow Chemical Co. has submitted a revised plan to deal with dioxin contamination down- stream from its Midland plant on the Tittabawassee River floodplain, where high levels of the toxic byproducts have been found. The plan submitted Tuesday met the state Department of Environmental Quality's deadline, The Saginaw News reported. Regulators hope it will cap a contamination problem that has prompt- ed litigation by residents along the river. The plan provides a blueprint for cleaning up the floodplain. It outlines a wild game study, soil sampling in sev- eral Midland neighborhoods and the removal of contaminated agricultural land from production. The new plan, which comes two months after the state told Midland- based Dow to refine its original proposal, details an effort that would build com- munity information centers, cover parks with new soil or wood chips to reduce dioxin exposure and map the floodplain. With a final draft in hand, state regu- lators could approve the plan or adopt it with changes. Last month, the state Department of Community Health said it would investi- gate dioxin levels in people who live on the Tittabawassee River floodplain. Dioxins are highly toxic byproducts of manufacturing and incineration systems and may cause cancer, birth defects and other health problems in humans. More than 300 plaintiffs are suing Dow Chemical over contamination along the Tittabawassee River. The lawsuit seeks damages for lost property value and seeks establishment of a medical monitoring trust fund to pay for residents' dioxin poisoning testing and treatment, if necessary. DEAN Continued from Page 1A "I was a little surprised first when he said he would drop out after Wis- consin and then when he retracted that," she added. Raghavan said that she expected most Dean supporters at the University to swing toward Kerry's campaign follow- ing the former governor's withdrawal. Like Dean, Raghavan said she will support any Democratic candidate that appears to have the ability to defeat President Bush in the November presi- dential elections. The former governor's campaign has left its footprint on the Democratic contest, despite his early withdrawal. Dean set a party record last year for most funds raised in the third quarter of the fiscal year, having earned $15 million during that time period. Online fundraising, one of Dean's principle campaign tools, has also popularized the Internet as a medium through which to generate large finances by collecting small donations from individuals. For example, on Feb. 5 alone the campaign raised more than $474,000 through online dona- tions of about $50 each, according to Dean's website. This personalized campaign approach, coupled with cer- tain socially liberal policies - such as repealing all of the Bush tax cuts - constituted Dean's effort to differenti- ate himself from the other candidates and redirect the party faithful from some of the Clinton administration's policies. Finally, Dean's exit from the race also increases the distance between the frontrunners and the runners-up, isolating Kerry and Edwards as the two viable candidates for the nomi- nation. Kerry and Edwards have won 74 percent of the representatives between them, while the Rev. Al Sharpton and Rep. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio have a combined 5 percent of the delegates. Fake and bake Kerry helped most by Michigan Internet votes LANSING (AP) - Internet voting drew more older voters than expected and helped Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry more than Howard Dean, Michigan Democratic Executive Chairman Mark Brewer said yesterday. "The bulk of the early voting was for Dean," Brewer said. But two-thirds of the 46,543 people who voted over the Inter- net held onto their ballots until the Feb. 7 Democratic caucuses or just a few days before, so early voting didn't turn out to be much of an advantage for the former Vermont governor. The average age of Internet voters participating in the caucuses was 48.5 years. Although roughly 6,000 Internet voters were 30 or younger, many more voters were in their late 40s or in their 50s, party statistics show. Kerry originally objected to letting Michigan use Internet voting in its Democratic presidential caucuses, arguing along with most of the other presidential candidates - except Dean and Wesley Clark - that it would disenfran- chise low-income and minority voters. Michigan was the first state to have such an extensive Internet voting period, lasting nearly five weeks, and the only one to use Internet voting this year. In the end, the Massachusetts senator got 22,999 of his 84,214 votes through electronic voting and 49 percent of the Internet ballots cast, while Dean got 8,944 votes of the 26,994 he collected, or 19 percent of the Internet votes. U.S. Sen. John Edwards, who came in third, got 15 percent. Many observers had expected Dean to dominate the Inter- net voting since many of his supporters were younger voters or affluent, college-educated voters familiar with the Internet. Michigan State University political science professor David Rohde said that "if Dean had been more competitive, then the number of younger voters may have been at least marginally higher." But Dean already was reeling from Kerry's successes in the early contests by the time Michigan held its caucuses, and Kerry easily walked away with the race. Dean suspend- ed his campaign Wednesday after failing to win any of the 17 primaries or caucuses held so far. Brewer said 28 percent of Michigan voters used the Inter- net, while 14 percent voted by mail and 58 percent voted in person at caucus sites. Problems arose when six caucus sites in Detroit and possibly others elsewhere around the state were closed or moved, and some people who applied for Internet or mail-in ballots never received them. But Brewer said he thinks the overall process worked well. "I liked the mix of voting options," he said. "We're not aware of any security or integrity problems. ... Having a quarter of the vote come in over the Internet was good." Mark Grebner of Practical Political Consulting in East Lansing also said he found no security problems with the mix of caucuses and Internet and mail-in votes. But the Democrat said other snafus kept some people from voting. He criticized party officials for sending out ballots by bulk mail the first two weeks of January, noting that 10 per- cent of all bulk mail never arrives. "It appears not all the ballots were mailed promptly, or at least they didn't arrive promptly," he said. MIKE HULSEBUS/Daily LSA sophomore Katie Krater wipes down a bed at Campus Tan yesterday. Lines took over an hour due to the spring break rush. If you've got ambition, bp we've got room. Vl PO We set high standards. We want people who share them. People who want to work on some of the most interesting business issues, for some of the most prestigious krmnri in the anrld Vnn'Il nppd tn hp datrminpd_ hist vn..'ll never ha nn vniir nwn