The Michigan Daily - michigandaily com Thursday, October 25, 2007 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS SAN FRANCISCO Microsoftbuys 1.6 percent share of Facebook Rapidly rising Internet star Facebook Inc. has sold a 1.6 percent stake to Microsoft Corp. for $240 million, spurning a competing offer from online search leader Google Inc. Culminating weeks of negotia- tions, the investment announced yesterday values Palo Alto-based Facebook at $15 billion - a stunning figure for an online hangout started in a Harvard University dorm room less than four years ago. Microsoft also will sell Internet ads for Facebook as the site expands outside the United States, broaden- ing a marketing relationship that began last year. CIZRE, Turkey Turkey attacks rebels along Iraqi border Turkish warplanes and helicop- ter gunships reportedly pounded Kurdish rebel positions along the Turkey-Iraq border yesterday, broadening military operations against insurgents amid persistent fears Turkey will launch a major offensive inside Iraq. Turkish Cabinet members and military generals held a six-hour meeting in Ankara to discuss a pos- sible operation in northern Iraq, but decided to recommend the gov- ernment take economic measures first to force cooperation by Iraqis against Kurdish rebels. The state-run Anatolia news agency reported that Turkish warplanes and attack helicopters bombed mountain paths used by rebels to cross the porous border from Iraq and stage hit-and-run attacks against soldiers in south- eastern Turkey. SAGINAW Students shot at middle school football game Gunfire broke out near a foot- ball field where two middle school teams were playing, leaving two youths and two adults wounded, police say. The four were taken to hospitals, said police Lt. Brian Lipe. A 16-year-old male was shot in the neck, Detective Sgt. Brent Van- derhaar said, but he said he had no information on the victims' con- ditions. Southfield radio station WWJ-AM reported that the victim with the neck wound was hospital- ized in critical condition and that the two adults were released. LANSING Health insurance plan passes in Mich. state House Michigan residents buying their own individual health insurance plans could get price and coverage protection under legislation passed yesterday by the state House, sup- porters said. But opponents said the four-bill package now headed to the Senate would give Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan an unfair edge over commercial insurance competitors without necessarily saving custom- ers money. A key provision would allow a Blue Cross Blue Shield subsidiary, the Lansing-based Accident Fund, to broaden its product offerings beyond workers' compensation to include other coverage such as fire and casualty. The Accident Fund also provides third party adminis- tration services and disability man- agement. Under the legislation, insurance companies - except for Blue Cross - would be able to refuse an indi- vidual health coverage if the person doesn't meet its criteria. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 3,838 Number of American service mem- bers who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. The Department of Defense identified the following casualty yesterday: Staff Sgt. Larry I. Rougle, 25, of West Jordan, Utah FULBRIGHT From page 1A staff to process the interviewees. "We are working on how to develop an administrative struc- ture to accommodate the increasing number of students," Kehoe said. She credits the high turnout to the increased press andattentionthe pro- gram has received in recentyears. "Through word of mouth, it's built a life of its own," she said. "Success breeds success." Andres Carter, a University alum working as an architect in Brazil with a grant from the Fulbright Program, said that while most peo- ple were dedicated and helpful, his experience with the University's- program to help applicants was not entirelypositive.He saidhereceived a lot of help early in the process, but that he was unable to get help dur- ing the final partof his application. "Before the acceptance, I thought the program put up many barriers to stop you from receiving the grant," he said. "Even though there were plenty of resources, it was still a very difficult project to complete." Kehoe, who has runthe program for four years, holds information sessions between January and Sep- tember to keep students up to date on requirements and resources like professors and previous successful mission statements. "It's up to individual students whether or nottheytake advantage of the advising available," she said. University alum Cameron Gokee, a Fulbright scholar studying archae- ology in Senegal, said the Universi- ty's support system played a key role in his receiving a scholarship. He said Kehoe, along with archaeology faculty, helped him improve the application before its final submission by going over his materials to ensure they fit the cri- teria for his specific program. Kehoe said she has hope for the future of University of Michigan students in the program. "The fact that we had ten more than the next top institution is unbelievable, just fantastic," she said. -Lindy Stevens contributed to this report. I i