The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS BAGHDAD1 Leader in Sunni revolt against al-Qaida killed The assassination yesterday of the leader of the Sunni Arab revolt against al-Qaida militants dealt a setback to one of the few success stories in U.S. efforts to stabilize Iraq, but tribesmen in Anbar prov- ince vowed not to be deterred in fighting the terror movement. American and Iraqi officials hoped the death of Abdul-Sat- tar Abu Risha would not stall the campaign to drive al-Qaida in Iraq from the vast province spreading west of Baghdad and reconcile Sunnis with the Shiite-led national government. It was the biggest blow to the Anbar tribal alliance since a suicide bomber killed four anti-al-Qaida sheiks as they met in a Baghdad hotel in June. Abu Risha himself had escaped a suicide attack in February. But those attacks and others did not stop the campaign against al-Qaida. t BEAUMONT, Texas Humberto dumps f heavy rain on Texas, Lousiana t Humberto, the firsthurricane to a hit the U.S. in two years, sneaked t up on south Texas and Louisi- ana overnight and crashed ashore t yesterday with heavy rains and I 85 mph winds, killing at least one person. I The system rapidly became a s Category 1 hurricane, then weak- c ened to a tropical storm by mid- s morning and bore into central Louisiana. Roads were flooded and power was knocked out, but the s greatest concern was heavy rain e falling in areas already inundated by a wet summer. Humberto wasn't even a tropical storm until Wednesday afternoon, t strengthening from a tropical r depression with 35 mph winds to o a hurricane with 85 mph winds in just 18 hours, senior hurricane u specialist James Franklin said at the National Hurricane Center in t Miami. a o CLEVELAND t Michigan GOP activist gets 5years t for sexual battery b in A lawyer who formerly led a 1 Michigan young Republicans orga- i nization was sentenced yesterday to five years in prison on a guilty S plea to sexual battery stemming a from allegations that he forced sex B acts on a woman while both were a at a convention last year. t Cuyahoga County Common v Pleas Judge Peter J. Corrigan p sentenced Michael A. Flory, 33, of Jackson, Mich. Flory, dressed in a f jacket, white.tie and dark blue but- t ton-down shirt, was led from the a courtroom in handcuffs. t Other charges, including rape, o kidnapping, aggravated burglary and gross sexual imposition, were b dismissed when he pleaded guilty s July 24. V WASHINGTON c Superfund site i cleanups have slowed under Bush The Environmental Protection Agency will finish 24 Superfund toxic waste cleanups this year, far fewer than the average 76 com- pleted annually during the Clinton administration.. EPA initially targeted 40 Super- fund sites for completed cleanups this fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30. Forty cleanups were finished in fiscal 2005. Among the most com- mon contaminants are asbestos, lead, mercury and radiation. Rep. JohnDingell (D-Dearborn) chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, blamed the Bush administration's efforts to cut EPA spending for slowing the pace of cleanups, even though Congress ultimately sets the agen- cy's budget. - Compiled from Daily wire reports I39775 Number of American service members who have died in the War in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. The following were identified by the Department of Defense yesterday: Staff Sgt. Yance T. Gray, of Ismay, Mont., Staff Sgt. Gregory Rivera- Santigo, 26, of St. Croix, Virgin Islands, Sgt. Michael C. Hardegree, 21, of Villa Rica, Ga., Sgt. Omar L. Mora, 28, of Texas City, Texas, Sgt. Nicholas J. Patterson, 24, of Rochester, Ind., s Spc. Ari D. Brown-Weeks, 23, of Abingdon, Md., Spc. Steven R. Elrod, 20, of Hope Mills, N.C. Friday, September 14, 2007 - 3A STUDY ABROAD FAIR Bush: Progress allows for some troop reduction President says 5,700 will leave by mid-July By STEVEN LEE MEYERS and CARL HULSE The New York Times WASHINGTON - Presi- dent Bush contended yester- day night that his plan to begin withdrawing some troops From Iraq gradually was a return on success" that could be squandered by the deeper and speedier reductions that . he war's opponents have demanded. At the same time, Bush called or an "enduring relationship" with Iraq that would keep American forces there "beyond my presidency," saying a free and friendly Iraq was essential o the security of the region and the United States.:He cast he war in Iraq as a vital part of a strategy in the Middle East o defeat al-Qaida and counter Iran. Evidently sensitive to how ower troop levels might be een - by enemies abroad and ritics at home - he empha- ized in his address that early drawdowns were now possible only because the strategy of ending more troops to Iraq ight months ago had worked. He did not once use the word withdrawal. "The more successful we are, he more American troops can eturn home," Bush said, trying ince again to win support for a war in Iraq that remains deeply inpopular. The speech was the first ime since the war began four nd a half years ago that Bush utlined a plan for troop reduc- ions, to bring levels down from he current high of 169,000. He held out the prospect of more eductions but committed only o a plan that would withdraw iy next July the additional ombat units he ordered there n January, leaving a main body if more than 130,000 troops ntact. In the Democratic response, en. Jack Reed of Rhode Island, .West Point graduate, said that lush was making the case for n "endless and unlimited mili- ary presence in Iraq," and he 'owed that Congress would irevent it. "Once again, the president ailed to provide either a plan o successfully end the war or iconvincing rationale to con- inue it," said Reed, an author f a Democratic proposal to withdraw most combat troops y next spring but still leave a ignificant force in Iraq to pro- 'ide training and security. Bush's 18-minute address ulminated several weeks f political stagecraft that ncluded several speeches and a presidential trip to Iraq but also heavy reliance by the White House on Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top American commander in Iraq, to make the public case for a strategy overseen by the commander in chief. While promoting progress in Iraq, Bush conceded that his vision for Iraq would be a dif- ficult one to achieve. That acknowledgment was punctuated with macabre timing by the assassination in Anbar Province, west of Baghdad, yesterday of a Sunni sheik, Abdul Sattar Buzaigh al- Rishawi, who had led a group of tribal leaders into an alliance with the United States and who had met the president during his trip to Iraq only 10 days ago. The White House clearly sought to maximize the politi- cal benefits from the announce- ment of a troop reduction, which some military officials said would have had to happen anyway unless the administra- tion took the politically unpal- atable step of extending troops' tours in Iraq to longer than 15 months. The first 5,700 troops affected by the pullback would leave Iraq this year - "by Christmas," Bush said - and roughly 18,000 more would do so by mid-July 2008. Still, other forces of what came to be called "the surge" could remain and new ones could be sent, administra- tion and military officials said Thursday. As a result, the num- ber of troops in Iraq could be higher in summer 2008 than it was in fall 2006 before the surge began, a fact likely to infuriate Bush's critics and upset even some Republican supporters. Bush's approach sets the stage for a legislative clash, beginning next week in the Senate, as Democrats renew their efforts to put together a bipartisan coalition to win approval of legislation forcing a change in policy in Iraq. Bush, in his remarks, seemed to hope that by beginning a withdrawal, it would mollify those who were increasingly alarmed by the size and cost of the commitment and unite Americans behind the war in a way they have rarely been from the start. "The way forward I have described tonight makes it possible, for the first time in years, for people who have been on opposite sides of this difficult debate to come togeth- er," he said. That seemed unlikely. Democratic leaders did not wait for the formal remarks to render a judgment. "He wants an open-ended commitment with an open wallet by the American people," said Rep. Rahm Emanuel of Illinois, the chairman pf the House Demo- cratic Caucus. LSA freshman Natalia Lalonde talks to LSA senior Madi Wachman and Engineering senior Jacob Schonberg abot studyint in Cape Town,S outh Africa at the Study Abroad Fair in the Michigan Union Ballroom yesterday. GM is UAW*s main target for strike Company considered most stable among Big Three DETROIT (AP) - The United Auto Workers union has picked General Motors Corp. as the lead company and potential strike tar- get in contract negotiations with the Detroit Three, two local union officials said yesterday. The officials, who requested anonymity because the talks are private, said their locals received notice yesterday afternoon that GM would be the lead. Contracts betweenthe UAW and GM, Chrysler LLC and Ford Motor Co. were to expire at midnight on today. Normally, the union negotiates an agreement with the lead com- pany, which becomes the pattern for the other two. Industry ana- lysts consider GM's financial con- dition to be the strongest of the three. Spokeswomen at Ford and Chrysler confirmed yesterday that those companies have agreed to indefinite contract extensions with the union. The extensions can be canceled by either side with three days' notice. Chrysler spokeswoman Michele Tinson wouldn't speculate on when an agreement will be reached, but said both sides are "mak- ing constructive progress." Ford spokeswoman Marcey Evans also wouldn't say when an agreement might be reached. "We're goingto continue to work together," Evans said. Bargaining has been under way for months, formally begin- ning in July. Until yesterday, talks appeared to be progressing, but several local union leaders at GM plants said they had been told to begin preparations in case of a strike. Although such preparations are standard in the days before the contracts expire, several local union officials said yesterday that there may have been a snag in the talks overnight Wednesday. Workers at a Cadillac assembly and stamping complex in Lansing are readying their union hall to be the area's strike headquarters and are putting together picket signs, Chris "Tiny" Sherwood, president of UAW Local 652, said yesterday. Sherwood, who has been in touch with a member of the union's national' bargaining committee, said he was told the talks took a turn for the worse Wednesday night. "Apparently from last night until this morning, everything's changed," said Sherwood. "I've never been asked to get my hall ready for a strike in the last four contracts." Union officials at several other plants who asked not to be identified because they are not authorized to speak about the talks said they, too, were hold- ing strike meetings and getting their membership ready in case the international union calls for a walkout. Sherwood said his talks with union officials in Detroit give him the impression that this is more serious than usual. "If it's window dressing, they're sure not acting like it," he said. UAW spokesman Roger Kerson in Detroit would not comment yes- terday afternoon, nor would GM spokesman Tom Wickham. a r 0 GRADE: A TUNNY AND MADLY ARRESTING." -OWEN GLEIERMAN,ENTERTAINMENTTWEEKLY "GRIPPING, EXCITING, AND INSPIRATIONAL.' -RAFER'GUZMAN, NEWSDAY "IRRESISTIBLE!" -ATT zOLL ERSEITZ,THE NEW YORK TIMES SCOTTSCHUELLER,CHICAGOTRIBUNE "YOU WON'T SEE A MORE GRIPPING OR COMPELLING FLICK IN A THEATER THIS YEAR:' -KEVIN SMITH "ONE OF THE BEST MOVIES OF THE YEAR' -QUINTAINTITCSLNEWS.COM "I LOVED THIS FILM." RICHARD ROEPER,EBERT & ROEPER