The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, October 25, 2006 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON Ethics probe questions Hastert on Foley scandal House Speaker Dennis Hastert urged ethics investigators to work quickly to unravel the congressio- nal pages scandal yesterday, testi- fying before them just after a GOP lawmaker whose recollections dif- fer from his. The investigation is focusing on which House leaders were told about sexually explicit messages sent by Rep. Mark Foley to former pages, when leaders were told and what was done in response. Hastert and some other Republicans have suggested revelations about the messages were timed to hurt the GOP in next month's elections. Yesterday's appearances by Hast- ert (R-Ill.) and House GOP cam- paign chair Tom Reynolds (R-N.Y.) could signal that the four-member ethics committee is nearingthe end of its testimony-taking phase. Both men testified behind closed doors as committee rules require. BAGHDAD U.S.: More GIs may be needed to curb violence in Iraq Two weeks before U.S. mid- term elections, American officials unveiled a timeline yesterday for Iraq's Shiite-led government totake specific steps to calm the world's most dangerous capital and said more U.S. troops might be needed to quell the bloodshed. U.S. officials previously said they were satisfied with troop levels and had expected to make signifi- cant reductions by year's end. But a surge in sectarian killings, which welled up this past summer, forced them to reconsider. At a rare joint news conference with the American ambassador, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, Gen. George Casey, said additional U.S. troops could come from inside or outside Iraq to "improve basic ser- vices for the population of Bagh- dad." PHILADELPHIA Christmas creeping up on shoppers even before Halloween It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas - and it's only October. Santa isn't here yet, but retailers already are stocking shelves with Christmas merchandise, in some cases setting up Christmas trees and holiday lighting way before Thanksgiving and even pre-empt- ing Halloween. Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Target Corp. and J.C. Penney Co. are some retailers hoping to get consumers into a Christmas shopping frame of mind two months early. Sears Holdings Corp.'s Sears and Kmart stores kick off the Yuletide mood in late October or early November. Costco Wholesale Corp. said it's always put out Christmas orna- ments, gift wrap, cards and artifi- cial trees as early as September. SHERMAN TOWNSHIP Amish come together after girl dies inbuggy crash Members of the area's Amish communitygathered to support the family of an 11-year-old Amish girl who was killed when a pickup truck rear-ended a horse-drawn buggy carrying her, her five siblings and their parents. Kathryn Miller died in Sunday night's crash in Newaygo County's Sherman Township, just east of Fremont. A sister, Lorene Miller, who is less than a year old, was listed in serious condition at Spectrum Health Butterworth Campus in Grand Rapids. Another sister, Rachel Miller, 9, broke bones in her legs and suf- fered a ruptured spleen, The Grand Rapids Press reported yesterday. She was in good condition at Ger- ber Memorial Medical Center in Fremont. The other three children - Luel- la, Freeman and Melvin - and parents Levi and Amelia Miller suffered minor injuries. No serious injuries were report- ed in the second accident. -Compiled from Daily wire reports SITE OF THE AY White victims sought more THE LULLABY OF BIRDLAND Katrina Minorities were less aggressive in filing insurance complaints NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The Littles and the Kitchens watched helplessly as Hurricane Katrina battered their homes. Both families waited patiently for an insurance adjuster to settle their losses. And both were sorely disappointed with the outcome. Then, their paths diverged. Richard and Cindy Little, a white couple living in a predominantly white neighborhood, filed a com- plaint with the Louisiana Depart- ment of Insurance. Eventually, they won full reimbursement for their repairs. Doretha and Roy Kitchens, a black couplemliving in New Orleans' overwhelmingly black Lower Ninth Ward, simply gave up and took what their insurer gave them. They didn't know they could appeal to the state. Though poor and minority neighborhoods suffered the brunt of Katrina's fury, residents living in white neighborhoods have been three times as likely as homeown- ers in black neighborhoods to seek state help in resolving insurance disputes, according to anAssociated Press computer analysis. The analysis of Louisiana's insur- ance complaints settled in the first year after Katrina highlights a cold, hard truth exposed by Katrina's winds and waters: People of color and modest means, who often need . aid the most help after a major disaster, are disconnected from the govern- ment institutions that can provide it, or distrustful of those in power. "The blacks didn't complain 'cause they got tired," said Doretha Kitchens, 58, who recalls numer- ous phone calls to her insurer that often ended with her being put on hold. Ultimately, she accepted her insurer's offer of about $34,000 for damages that actually total more than $120,000. The insurance industry and state regulators say they made spe- cial efforts - even in the midst of Katrina's chaos - to reach out to poor and minority neighborhoods to inform them of options. But their ad appeals on local radio did little to inform the thou- sands of mostly black residents who were displaced to Houston. And giving a toll free number for help didn't help poor minorities who stayed behind with no telephone or cell service. Officials acknowl- edge victims slipped through the cracks. "The message doesn't get to everyone," Louisiana Insurance Commissioner Jim Donelon said. More than a year after the epic hurricane laid waste to much of the Gulf Coast, frustration and anger still simmer. More than 700,000 insurance claims were filed for damage result- ing from Katrina in Gulf Coast states and to date, only $14.9 billion out of $25.3 billion in insured losses have been paid, the national risk model- ing firm ISO estimates. Riana Nelson (vocals) and Pat Whitehead (piano) perform the world premiere arrangement of "Skylark," a song arranged by Jimmy Heath with music by Hoagy Carmichael and lyrics by Johnny Mercer, in Rackham Auditorium yesterday. For second time in six years, Senate could be evenly split Bill threatens online gambling In case of a tie, Republicans would maintain majority WASHINGTON (AP) - Expect- ed Democratic gains in the election raise the possi-ility that the Sen- ate, for the second time in six years, will end up in a 50-50 tie. If that happens, Democrats would like to revive a power-shar- ing deal that was struck in 2001. But partisan passions on Capitol Hill are stronger now than when President Bush took office promis- ing to be "a uniter, not a divider." Republicans would officially still be the majority party in an evenly divided Senate because Vice Presi- dent Dick Cheney, in his role as president of the Senate, would give the GOP a tie-breaking vote. But Democrats would surely demand a greater role in determining how the Senate treated Bush's legisla- tive agenda in his final two years in the White House. Currently Republicans hold 55 seats and the Democrats 44. Sen. James Jeffords, an independent from Vermont who usually votes with the Democrats, is retiring at the end of this session. The 2000 election resulted in a Senate split down the middle. Democratic leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota became majority leader for just 17 days, between Jan. 3, 2001, when the new Senate was sworn in and Al Gore was still vice president, and the Jan. 20 inaugu- ration of Bush and Cheney. In returning to the majority leader position, Sen. Trent Lott (R- Miss.) negotiated with Daschle a power-sharing arrangement under which the two parties got equal numbers of seats and staff posi- tions on committees. Republicans chose committee chairmen and controlled the agenda on the Sen- ate floor. Lott took some heat from his Republican colleagues at the time for being overly generous to Demo- crats, but it paid off four months later when Jeffords bolted from the GOP and became an independent allied with the Democrats. That put the Democrats back in control with Daschle as majority leader. The Lott-Daschle deal stayed intact until November 2002, when Republican James Talent defeated Missouri's appointed senator, Jean Carnahan, in a special election and Republicans regained power. They've held majorities on Senate committees since then. This time, Democrats may need the help of two independents to reach parity with the Republicans. Rep. Bernie Sanders, another Vermont independent, is the front- runner in the race to succeed Jef- fords. Sanders has always been a member of the Democratic caucus in the House and his office said he would continue to support the Democrats in the Senate. Democratic Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut appears likely to return to Congress as an indepen- dent after his loss to a Democratic challenger inthe primaries. Lieber- man, in line to become chairman of the Homeland Security and Gov- ernmental Affairs Committee if Democrats capture the Senate, is also committed to staying with the Democratic caucus, his office said. Jim Manley, press spokesman for Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid of Nevada, said that in the event of a 50-50 breakdown the 2001 Lott-Daschle deal "should serve as a useful guidepost for any negotiations" on power-shar- ing between Reid and Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky). Business growth, not gamblers, could suffer - from bill NEW YORK (AP) - Gamblers may look over their shoulder now, but experts say a new Internet gambling ban won't keep bettors from ponying up, just turn them on to overseas payment services out of the law's reach. "It has put a terrible scare into people," said I. Nelson Rose, who teaches gambling law at Whittier Law School. "But it won't by any means wipe out Internet gam- bling." The fright swept through the $12 billion industry on the heels of the recent arrests of two gambling company executives and a new law President George W. Bush signed Oct. 13 that seeks to ban most online gambling and criminalizes funds transfers. The law has wiped out billions of dollars in shareholder value of British companies, leaving the industry's future in doubt as U.S. lawmakers initially trumpeted they had found a way to halt bets coming from the America. But serious questions remain about whether the legislation can be effective in stopping U.S. resi- dents from playing poker or betting on sports. The "Unlawful Internet Gam- bling Enforcement Act" goes after the money, not the millions of play- ers, which would be nearly impos- sible to enforce. It will essentially try to choke off the way Americans fund their gam- bling habits, hoping to prevent the transfer of dollars to the popular Internet sites. 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