The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Ford poised for biggest loss in corporate history Ford Motor Co. could post the worst annual loss in its storied 103- year history when the automaker releases its 2006 earnings today. The old record net loss was $7.39 billion in 1992, but through three quarters of this year, Ford already had lost $7 billion. Burnham Securities analyst David Healy said in a note to inves- tors that Ford has yet to recover from its finances being wrecked by collapsing sales of its F-series pick- up trucks and truck-based sport utility vehicles. The company has mortgaged its assets to borrow up to $23.4 bil- lion to fund a massive restructur- ing plan and cover billions in losses expected until 2009. It expects to burn up $17 billion in cash during the next two years before returning to profitability. About 38,000 hourly workers have signed up for buyout or early retirement offers from the compa- ny, and Ford plans to cut its white- collar work force by 14,000 with buyouts and early retirements. MEXICO CITY Disastrous bus plunge kills 29 A bus plunged into a ravine in the remote mountains of southern Mexicoyesterday, killing at least29 people, officials said. The spokesman for the state attorney general's office in Oaxaca, Jesus Perez, told The Associated Press by phone that the bus went off the road shortly after leaving Huautla, 600 kilometers (375 miles) southeast of Mexico City. It was headed to the capital. More than two dozen survivors were injured, Perez said. BAGHDAD Four contractors executed after helicopter crash Four of the five Americans killed when a U.S. security company's helicopter crashed in a danger- ous Sunni neighborhood in central Baghdad were shot execution style in the back the head, Iraqi and U.S. officials said yesterday. A senior Iraqi military official said a machine gunner downed the helicopter, but a U.S. military official in Washington said there were no indications that the air- craft, owned by Blackwater USA, had been shot out of the sky. Two Sunni insurgent groups, separate- ly, claimed responsibility for the crash. The helicopter was shot down after responding to assist a U.S. Embassy ground convoy that came under fire in a Sunni neighborhood in central Baghdad, said a U.S. dip- lomatic official in Washington. A second helicopter also was struck, but there were no casualties among its crew, said the diplomatic official, who spoke anonymously because he was not authorized to make statements. JERUSALEM Israeli PM calls for president to resign amid rape charges Israeli President Moshe Katsav rebuffed growing calls for his res- ignation yesterday. Katsav asked parliament to tem- porarily suspend him from office while he fought to clear his name. But momentum was building for lawmakers to open unprecedented impeachment proceedings against the president, and top officials, including Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, urged Katsav to stop cling- ing to office and allow the nation to heal. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 20,000 The number of Canadian citi- zens who may have lost their citi- zenship due to celebrating their 24th birthday outside Canada and failing to turn in the appropriate form the next day. The Citizenship and Immigration Minister is work- ing to establish a fast-track way for those residents to become citizens again, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported. RUSH HOUR RECRUITS From page 1A Stephen Taylor graduated from high school in 2004. "I've wanted to be in the mili- tary my whole life," said the ROTC cadet, whose parents are retired Air Force veterans. Taylor said his family's military history can be traced as far back as the American Revolution. "I was proud that my grandpar- ents and relatives all fought, and I wanted to be a part of that," Taylor said. His 19-year-old brother Michael enlisted right out of high school and hopes to become an Army Ranger. But it was originally Stephen who was going to enlist after high school and his younger brother who planned to become an officer. Taylor said their roles reversed during his senior year of high school, when his wrestling coach encouraged him to try the ROTC. He said he was "lucky" to be admitted to the University so late in the admissions cycle. Taylor said becoming an officer while experiencing life at the Uni- versity is one of the best decisions he's ever made, especially after watching his brother go through boot camp. He said watching the experiences of enlistees like his brother have furthered Taylor's passion for the Army. "After 9/11, Ihad arealreason(to join)," he said. "If I go over there, the chances of me protecting my friends and family is increased." ROTC cadet Patrick Doyle, an LSA junior, is waiting for his 25- year-old stepbrother, an enlisted soldier, to return this week from a 10-month mission in Afghanistan. While he hasn't been able to communicate with him during his tour, Doyle said he's looking for- ward to learning how to be a better officer based on his stepbrother's experiences as a private. "When he gets back, I really want to talk to him about his lieutenant, what he did right and wrong," Doyle said. APPREHENSION AND ANTICIPATION "I used to be a lot more politi- cal than I am (now)," Young said of how his ROTC experience has changed his personal opinions. "As an officer, or as any soldier, you're not supposed to question the political aims." Many of his comrades were quick to agree. Tisdall distin- guished a soldier's actions from his personal feelings. "We're going to do our job that our commanders tell us to do, regardless of our opinions," he said. For Tisdall, the physical and mental challenges posed by the Army were what initially attracted him to it. "If you can make it through that - 22-years-old, 40 guys, bullets flying - if you can make it through that, that's the ultimate test," he said. Doyle said a similar sense of duty motivated him to join ROTC. "Somebody has to do it," he said. "I'm a person that mentally and physically can do it, so for me, I'm not the kind of person who's going to let someone else bear my burden." Thursday, January 25, 2007 - 3A LSA sophomore David Millikan said he's most apprehensive of the unknown. "I'm worried about getting hurt - everybody is," he said. "But on another level, I'm worried about what I need to do and doing it cor- rectly." Millikan said he also worries for his family. "I know my mom's not too excit- ed about it," he said. Many of the cadets are excited that the ongoing war means they may soon have the opportunity to put their skills and training to use. "We're both excited, but not to kill people," Tisdall said of him- self and Taylor. "It's not bloodlust excitement. It's an excitement to go over there and do your duty." Young was preparing to gradu- ate from high school when the United States first invaded Iraq in the spring of 2003. Four years later, as he prepares for another graduation, he finds himself longing to extend his career at the University to study and have fun without worrying about the war. "Now that it is imminent, I kind of want to still be a college student and keep doing what I'm doing," he said. Young said he's also impressed with the amount of respect that he sees cadets receiving from the campus community, even though they're still in training. "There's no bullets around here," he said. "There's no explo- sions. We don't have to go to sleep in a hole in the ground. Can you imagine bombs going off where you live, 24 hours a day?" ROBMIGRIN/Daily Acrowd of studentsfills the lobbyoftAngellHall yesterday afternoon shortly after classes let out at 4 p.m. Kerry rules out 0 se ondrun in'0 Former nominee struggled to secure support in a crowded primary field WASHINGTON (AP) - Demo- cratic Sen. John Kerry, who fell 118,601 Ohio votes short of the White House in 2004, said yester- day he will not run for president in 2008. "We came close.., certainly close enough to be tempted to try again," the Massachusetts senator said, recalling his defeat. "There are powerful reasons to want to continue that fight now. But I have concluded this isn't the time for me to mount a presidential campaign." His decision leaves a field of nine Democrats running or signal- ing their intention to do so, includ- ing Sens. Hillary Rodhamn Clinton of New York and Barack Obama of Illinois, and John Edwards, Ker- ry's 2004 vice presidential run- ning mate. The Republican field is similarly crowded, with Bush constitution- ally barred from seeking a third term in office. Officials said Kerry would seek a new six-year term in the Senate in 2008. The fourth-term lawmaker and decorated Vietnam War veteran said he would devote his time and energy to endingthe conflict in Iraq. He said he wanted President Bush's successor to enter office with the United States having "a reasonable prospect of success" in Iraq. "I don't want the next president U.S. attacks targetc~s in Somalia Air strikes target suspected terrorists in war-torn nation WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States launched an airstrike in Somalia against suspected ter- rorist targets - the second such attack this month, defense officials said yesterday. The officials, who spoke on condi- tion of anonymity because the action was carried out in secret, provided few details about the strike by an Air Force AC-130 gunship earlier this week and were uncertain whether the intended target was killed. One official suggested that early indications showed that no high- value target was killed or captured. At the Defense Department, spokesman Bryan Whitman declined to confirm any new strike. but said in general that the United States is "going to go after al-Qaida in the global war on terrorism wher- ever it takes us." He said the nature of some mili- tary operations, especially those by special operations commando forc- es, requires that they be kept secret in order to preserve an advantage in future missions. A variety of U.S. special opera- tions have operated in the Horn of Africa from a base in Djibouti, a small country sandwiched between Somalia and Ethiopia. The U.S. Navy also has had forces in waters off the Somali coast, where they have monitored maritime traf- fic, boarded suspicious ships and interrogated crews in an attempt to catch anyone escaping the Somalia militar operations. to find that they have inherited a nation still divided and a policy destined to end as Vietnam did - in a bitter and sad legacy," he said. Kerry, 64, made the announce- muent on the Senate floor at the end of a lengthy speech on Iraq. He briefly choked up. Edwards said he knew the decision was a difficult one for Kerry "because we know his first instinct is always to respond to any call to serve his country." In a statement, he added that Kerry will work to find the appropriate exit from the Iraq war and said, "In Vietnam, in public office and in private life, John Kerry has always fought the good fight for the right cause." Obama said that from Vietnam to the 2004 campaign, "John Kerry has fought for his country and his ideals... and will continue to serve his country with honor and distinc- tion in the years to come." Kerry's 2004 campaign drew widespread criticism from fel- low Democrats after his defeat. His critics said he had failed to make a forceful enough response to Republican criticism as well as charges by conservative groups that he did not deserve the medals he won for combat in the Vietnam War. The senator stirred unhappy memories for Democrats last fall, when he botched a joke and led Republicans to accuse him of attacking U.S. troops in Iraq. He apologized, then hast- ily scrapped several days of cam- paigning for fellow Democrats as party leaders urged him to avoid becoming an unwanted issue in a campaign they were on the way to JOIN THE DAILY. E-MAIL NEWS@MICHIGANDAILY.COM The University of Michigan Museum of Art FF/STE 1301 South University Ann Arbor, Michigan 734.763umma www.umia.umich edu HOURS Tu, Sa, Su: am to 6 pm We, Th, Fr: it am to 1 pom EmbraonnnEatonvilleis mde possible by Ford MotorGcrmpanyund. as part of its support OfUMMAs 2006-07sesn, V ,,V tMfl rqy md yh rvy ilyls Ofm f *C.P 4W3r tf c, ca s cw 1 h Aidiw (C.i "14sl c a gms ote The War On Truth Sunday, Jan. 28,2007 6:30 p.m. Michigan Union Ballroom 9/11 and our Civil Rights 530 S. State St., Ann Arbor, Michigan Presented by Ann Arbor 9/11 Truth FREE Details: 734-239-1877 A