The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS GAZA CITY Israeli troops kill eight Palestinians in Gaza raid Israeli troops seized a northern Gaza town yesterday in one of the largest strikes against Palestinian rocket squads in months, imposing a curfew, deploying snipers on roof- tops and patrolling streets in tanks. Eight Palestinians and an Israeli soldier were killed. However, cabinet ministers scrapped a plan to widen the con- flict, a move that coincided with U.S. and Egyptian efforts to stanch the flow of weapons to Palestinian extremists across the Gaza-Egypt border. The takeover of Beit Hanoun was expected to last only a few days, according to Israeli officials, who emphasized the operation was not the start of a broader military offen- sive in Gaza. One plan for such a major operation would involve seiz- ing large portions of southern Gaza to destroy weapons smuggling tun- nels from Egypt. Israel has several reasons not to launch such an offensive now. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is to meet with President Bush at the White House this month and likely would not want a major escalation in Gaza to overshadow the trip. LANSING Republicans sue Dems to stop campaign spending Republicans filed a federal law- suit yesterday to block Democrats from spending $440,000 on battle- ground races that could determine which party controls the Michigan Senate. The suit, a copy of which was provided to The Associated Press, alleges incumbent Democrats exceeded the annual $20,000-per- person limit that individuals can donate to legislative caucuses, in this case the Senate Democratic Fund. Republicans hope to get an injunction issued by a judge that would block much of the Demo- crats' spending in the final week of a hard-fought campaign sea- son. SEOUL, South Korea N. Korea says it wants access to frozen accounts North Korea said yesterday it was returning to nuclear disarma- ment talks to get access to its fro- zen overseas bank accounts, a vital source of hard currency. The North's Foreign Ministry made only indirect mention of its underground nuclear test last month. Instead, it focused in an official statement on its desire to end U.S. financial restrictions by going back to six-nation arms talks that it has boycotted for a year. OSHTEMO TWP, Mich. Meijer store to test radio tags on grocery carts Shopping carts at a Meijer store near Kalamazoo are being fitted with electronic tags for a test aimed at improving customer service in the checkout lanes, company rep- resentatives said. "This is a way for us to track how much time people are spending in grocery, in the service area and in checkout lanes so we can provide better service," Mark Kahler, a spokesman for the store in Kal- amazoo County's Oshtemo Town- ship, told the Kalamazoo Gazette for a story yesterday. -Compiled from Daily wire reports DID YOU KNOW? U.S.HISTORYISNOT OUR STRONG SUIT A recent survey found that University students received a failing grade on a test about Ameri- can history, government, foreign affairs and the economy, The Detroit News reported. The test was administered by the Univer- sity of Connecticut's Department of Public Policy on behalf of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute. Of the 50 colleges surveyed, the University ranked number 35. MEDITATIONS IN DETROIT Thursday, November 2, 2006 - 3A Kerry tries to quell furor with apology Apology to service members comes six days before elections WASHINGTON (AP) - Thrust into the midst of the midterm elec- tion campaign, Sen. John Kerry apologizedyesterday to "any service member, family member or Ameri- can" offended by remarks deemed by Republicans and Democrats alike to be insultingto U.S. forces in Iraq. Six days before the election, the 2004 Democratic presidential nominee said he sincerely regret- ted his words were "misinterpreted to imply anything negative about those in uniform." Inabriefstatement,Kerryattacked President Bush for a "failed security policy." Yet his apology, issued after prominent Democrats had urged him to cancel public appearances, was designed to quell a controversy that party leaders feared would stall their drive for biggains on Nov. 7. With polls showing the public opposed to the war in Iraq, Demo- crats have expressed increasing optimism in recent days that they will gain the 15 seats they need to win control of the House. They must pick up six seats to win the Senate, a taller challenge. Kerry beat a grudging retreat in his return to the national cam- paign spotlight. Earlier, on the radio program "Imus in the Morn- ing," the Massachusetts senator said he was "sorry about a botched joke" about Bush. He heaped praise on the troops, adamantly accused Republicans of twisting his words and said it was the com- mander in chief and his aides who "owe America an apology for this disaster in Iraq." Democrats cringed, though, at the prospect of the Massachusetts senator becoming the face of the party for the second consecutive national campaign. "No one wants to have the 2004 election replayed," said Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) like Kerry, a potential con- tender for the 2008 nomination. A stereo is prcminently displayed in "Meditations in ar Contemporary Art Detroit. The exhibit opened on Satur, ergency," an exhibit curated by Klaus Kertess in the Mt . For more coverage, see the B-Side. Voter drive aimedat immigrants "PUTS THE FUN BACK INTO SEX!" l l l "EX OT AND OP~I~stnl falls short, advocates say eTD"I." 150,000 of intended onstrated nationwide, sparked But by all accounts, simply find- AN ERO C HO N by a House bill that would have ing 1 million eligible new voters nuWNoe 1 million new foreign- made it a felony to be in the coun- in just a few months would have DRAY DEiCloVSlY try illegally. been tough. born voters registered The Senate's immigration bill "The 1 million - we were look- i o"R EW left that provision out and the ing at the potential of immigrant NEW YORK (AP) - After huge two chambers failed to reach a voter power," Jones said. "Look-AN E R 4( A ND immigration protests earlier this compromise. ing back, we realize ... the immi- A CARNAVASE1S2E RoNP year, advocates vowed to capital- Immigrants' advocates seized grant community is complicated non ismeWykEs ize on the energy and register 1 million new foreign-born voters, mostly Hispanics. But rhetoric has run headlong into reality: Organizers say that, as of last week, they had signed up fewer than 150,000 people. Advocates' experiences show that cultivating new voters is tough, plodding work, and that developing Latino power will rely not on street protests but on the group becoming more politically engaged as it gets older. "People were waving signs - 'Today we march, tomorrow we vote' - but that may not be something that's literally tomor- row," said Lionel Sosa, a Repub- lican political strategist who is CEO of Mexicans & Americans Thinking Together, a Web-based nonprofit. "It will be slow, but eventually everyone running for political office will understand that this is a vote to be reckoned with." This spring, immigrants dem- on momentum from the protests and organized what they called Democracy Summer. They pledged to register 1 mil- lion new foreign-born voters by next week's election - and anoth- er 2 million before the presidential contest in 2008. But Germonique Jones, spokes- woman for the Center for Com- munity Change, an umbrella organization of some of the nation's biggest immigrants groups, said the total is roughly 146,000. The Center for Community Change arrived at the figure by totaling estimates from the vari- ous groups with which it has been collaborating. Such estimates are difficult to confirm because secretaries of state do not tally new regis- trations based on ethnicity or where voters were born, said Catherine Ennis, a spokeswom- an for Pennsylvania's depart- ment of state. - not monolithic." First off, more than one in three of the nation's 42 million-plus His- panics are age 17 or younger, 2005 Census data show - too young to vote. And some portion of that pop- ulation, no one is sure exactly how many, includes illegal immigrants. * "Cf