The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS JERUSALEM r Israeli army chief resigns over Lebanon failures Israeli army commander Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz, under fire for failures in last summer's war in Lebanon, has resigned, the Defense Ministry said early today. Halutz has been under pressure to step down since the end of the 34-day war, which failed in its goals of defeating the anti-Israel mili- tant group Hezbollah and bringing home two captured soldiers. Israeli launched a full-scale attack on Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas after they seized the two men and killed three other soldiers in a cross-border raid July 12. ArmyRadioreportedthatHalutz sent his letter of resignation to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, say- ing that he was taking responsibil- Members of the Michigan Belly Danci ity for the outcome of the war. The group, open to people with all leve "For me the concept of responsi- bility is everything," Halutz wrote, according to Army Radio. Bombs kill ISLAMABAD, Pakistan Pakistani airstrikes U.N: 34,452 £ni'rlr nrnA civilians killed in ALL IN THE WAIST Wednesday, January 17, 2007 - 3A Obama to vie for White House in 2008 Illinois senator seeks up by money and influence, that we can't tackle the big problems that to capitalize on demand solutions. And that's what we have to change first." outsider image Obama filed paperwork forming a presidential exploratory commit- tee that allows him to raise money WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. and put together a campaign strut- Barack Obama launched a presiden- ture. He is expected to announce a tial campaign yesterday that would full-fledged candidacy on Feb. 10. make him the first black to occupy Obama's soft-spoken appeal on the White House, and immediately the stump, his unique background, tried to turn his political inexperi- his opposition to the Iraq war and ence into an asset with voters seek- his fresh face sethim apart in a com- ing change. petitive race that also is expected to The freshman Illinois senator include front-runner Sen. Hillary - and top contender for the Demo- Rodham Clinton of New York. cratic nomination - said the past Obama has uncommon political six years have left the country in a talents, drawing adoring crowds precarious place and he promoted even among the studious voters in himself as the standard-bearer for a New Hampshire during a much- new kind of politics. hyped visit there lastmonth. His has "Our leaders in Washington seem risen on the force of his personality incapable of working together in and message of hope - helped along a practical, commonsense way," by celebrity endorsements from the Obama said in a video posted on likes of Oprah Winfrey, billionaire his Web site. "Politics has become investor Warren Buffett and actors so bitter and partisan, so gummed Matt Damon and Edward Norton. Bush chastises Iraq for hanging ing Club practice some basic dancing techniques on the first floor of Havn Hall pesterdap. s of experience, meets on Tuesdays and Thursdays. 165 at Baghdad college Pakistani helicopter gunships attacked a suspected al-Qaida hide-out in a forest near the Afghan border yesterday, killing up to 10 people and sparking anger among tribesmen who said the dead were woodcutters, not terrorists. The raid in South Waziristan came as Defense Secretary Rob- ert Gates visited Afghanistan and as pressure grew on Pakistan to crack down on militants launching attacks across the frontier. Pakistan's army said intelligence sources confirmed the presence of 25 to 30 militants, including four or five unidentified al-Qaida ter- rorists, occupying five compounds in the area of Zamzola - a village about two miles from the frontier. Pakistani forces backed by Cobra gunships attacked them, destroy- ing three of the compounds. DETROIT Chrysler to slash Iraq last year BAGHDAD (AP) - Twin car bombs tore through aleadingBagh- dad university as students left class- es yesterday in the deadliest attack in Iraq in nearly two months, and the United Nations reported 34,452 civilians were slain last year, nearly three times more than the govern- ment reported. A total of 142 Iraqis were killed or found dead yesterday, in what appeared to be a renewed cam- paign of Sunni insurgent violence against Shiite targets. The sharp uptick in deadly attacks coincided with the recent release of U.N. fig- ures that showed an average of 94 civilians died each day in the sec- tarian bloodshed during the past year. The blasts wrecked two small buses as students at Al-Mustansi- riya University were lining up for the ride home at about 3:45 p.m., according to Taqi al-Moussawi, a university dean. At least 65 stu- dents died. The attackers stationed a man wearing a suicide belt in the expected path of fleeing students to take even more lives, but he was spotted and shot by security men before he could blow himself up, the dean said. "The only guilt of our martyred students is that they pursued edu- cation. They belongto all religions, sects and ethnic groups," said an angry al-Moussawi, himself a Shi- ite. "The terrorists want to stop education. ... Those students had nothing to do with politics." After the explosions, a rescue worker and three men in civilian clothes scrambled through the debris to carry a charred victim away ina sheet. Firefighters in yel- low helmets examined the charred wreckage of an bashed-in, over- turned minivan. The university's well-shaded campus occupies several square blocks in north central Baghdad, a mostly Shiite area. The school ranks second among institutions of higher education in Iraq. Founded in 1963, it was named after one of the oldest Islamic schools, estab- lished in the 13th century during the Abbasid dynasty that ruled the Muslim world. Thousands attend the university, known especially for its colleges of science, literature and education. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki blamed the attack on "terrorists and Saddamists" seeking revenge for Monday's hanging of two of Saddam Hussein's top aides, con- victed with him for the slaying of 148 Shiite men and boys after a 1982 assassination attempt in the north- ern town of Dujail. The violence yesterday against Shiites may signal a campaign by Sunni insurgents to shed as much blood as possible before the deploy- ment of 21,500 more American troops. Most of the additional U.S. troops will be used to back up the Iraqi army in a security sweep to rid the capital of Sunni and Shiite gunmen. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush said yesterday the unruly exe- cution of Saddam Hussein "looked like it was kind of a revenge kill- ing," making it harder to persuade a skeptical U.S. public that Iraq's gov- ernment will keep promises central to Bush's newly-released plan for a troop increase in theregion. In his toughest assessment yet, Bush criticized the circumstances of Saddam's hanging last month, as well as Monday's execution of two top aides, including Saddam Hussein's half brother. "I was disappointed and felt like they fumbled the - particularly the Saddam Hussein execution," the president said in an interview with PBS' Jim Lehrer. A cell phone video of Saddam's Dec. 30 hanging showed the deposed Iraqi leader being taunted as he stood on the gallows with a noose around his neck. An official video of the execution of Saddam's half brother showed that the hangman's noose ended up decapi- tating the relative. Both hang- ings provoked outrage around the world, but also particularly among Saddam's fellow Sunnis in Iraq. Bush said he had expressed his displeasure about the way Saddam's execution was handled to Iraqi Prime Minister Nourial-Maliki. I I jobs at engine plant Temperature drop raises citruS prices About 250 workers at a Chrysler Group plant that makes V-8 engines willbe furloughed nextweek as the company reduces engine produc- tion to match truck manufacturing cuts, a company official said Mon- day. The job cuts at the Mack Avenue Engine1 plantinDetroitcome asthe struggling company is studying all of its operations as part of a restrue- turing plan that will include more job cuts and plant closures. Details of the full plan are to be made public when DaimlerChrysler AG releases its 2006 earnings next month. The plant makes Chrysler's 4.7- liter V-8 that is used mainly in the slow-selling Dodge Durango, Jeep Grand Cherokee, Jeep Commander and Dodge Dakota. TEHRAN, Iran Despite tension, warm welcome in Iran for wrestlers U.S. wrestlers were welcomed to Iran yesterday with bouquets of pink and white flowers at a time of increasing tensions between the two countries, recalling the days before Tehran's reformers were defeated by its current hard-line leadership. - The Americans, wearing jackets emblazoned with "USA Wrestling," were given the warm greeting by young girls in traditional Iranian dresses at an airport in the southern city of Bandar Abbas. The 14wrestlers are to participate tomorrow and Friday in the Persian Gulf Cup, also known as the Takhti Cup, the top wrestling tournament in Iran, where the sport has been a national obsession for centuries. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 21i FRESNO, Calif. (AP) - Shoppers will feel the sting from a string of subfreezing nights in California's citrus groves and other farming areas, with prices for oranges, lemons, avocados and other pro- duce poised to double or triple in the upcoming weeks, according to California fruit and citrus indus- try officials. "We may adjust the prices as we discover the full extent of the damage next week, but for now, if you bought an orange at the supermarket for 50 cents, expect JOIN THE DAILY. COME TO ONE OF OUR MASS MEETINGS AT 413 E. H URON ST.: to pay a dollar to $1.49 for it," said Todd Steel, owner of Royal Vista Marketing, which sells California citrus to markets throughout the country. With the NFL playoffs in full swing, some fans may choose to go without two traditional football favorites. "Avocados areexpensive enough as it is," said Joseph Vasquez, a 32- year-old school teacher from Pasa- dena. "We may have to do without guacamole for a while. And we may be drinking our Coronas without limes." Nearly every winter crop is affected by the freeze, from avo- cados to strawberries to fresh-cut flowers, but it's the state's citrus crop that stands to take the big- gest economic hit. California is the nation's No. 1 producer of fresh cit- rus, growing about 86 percent of lemons and 21 percent of oranges sold in the U.S., according to the California Farm Bureau. Florida produces more oranges, but those are mostly processed for orange juice. university unions- almost as goad as snww,umich,edu,/~uuniorns [we embrace diversity.] M' Univesity Un"on" . __ Inspia i 'A," n Education TOMORROW AT 7:30P.M To play: Complete the grid so that every row, column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9. SUNDAY, JAN. 21 AT 7:30 P.M. MONDAY, JAN. 29 7:30 P.M. E-MAIL US: NEWS @MICHIGAN DAILY.COM ng or math involved, e. Good Luck and enjoy! jus 8 31 6 9' 3 8 2 t 9 3 1 7 2 6 94 15;1 l cpx . d '\ j~ r $ao Months between the creation of popular website YouTube.com and its rights being sold over to Google for 1.65 billion dollars. In less than two years, creators Steve Chen, Chad Hurley and Jawed Karim (all in their 20s) turned YouTube into a sensation with its mix of humorous and edgy clips. i 7 6 8 4, 2. _ 3,8 71E. 2 .,s ._. .> <.. A