The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, November 8, 2007 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS PRIMARY From page LANSING Senate votes to The state might also kill service tax political par es or nomi As expected, the Michigan Sen- instead. Prim ate voted 23-15 yesterday to repeal broader parti a much-maligned tax on services Michigan such as business consulting, tan- Chairman S ning and graphic design before it terday he sti takes effect Dec. 1. primary. The full House could follow up "Judge Co as early as Thursday with a plan it clear that replacing the $614 million the tax with holding would generate this fiscal year. mary in earl The linchpin to successfullykill- is encouragii ing the service tax is making up for statement. "T the revenue that lawmakers and in the proces Democratic Gov. Jennifer Gran- The Jan. holm have designated for K-12 pub- brought Mi lic schools and other government tion from services. candidates, Republicans. ISLAMABAD, Pakistan Democrats favor of cauc Bhutto's supporters reasons. .th 1.The Mic scuffle with police Party's e yesterday nig Supporters of Benazir Bhutto pulled from clashed with police in front of par- uled vote to liament yesterday after she urged mary date ol party activists into the streets to needed time protest emergency rule, deepen- ing and their ing the uncertainty engulfing a chairman Ma Pakistan already shaken by rising After the n Islamic militancy. Seekingto position herself as the only leader able to unite the coun- try to confront Islamic extremism, the former prime minister tough- ened her rhetoric against President Gen. Pervez Musharraf, but she left open the possibility of resuming talks if he ends the crackdown. President Bush, meanwhile, told the U.S.-allied general that Paki- stan must go through with parlia- mentary elections that had been planned for January. TBLISI, Georgia Georgian president declares state of emergency Riot police used tear gas, rub- ber bullets and water cannon yesterday to break up demon- strations calling for the ouster of President Mikhail Saakashvili. The pro-Western leader declared a state of emergency and banned all news broadcasts except state- emntrolled television.--- Saakashvili, a U.S. ally who has tried to integrate Georgia with the West, also expelled three Russian diplomats and accused Moscow of fomenting the pro- tests, which began last week. He now faces the worst political crisis of his four years in office S. in this former Soviet republic, where a low-level tug-of-war between Russia and the West is 603 E. LIB being played out. There has been growing disil- lusion with Saakashvili among critics who say he has not moved fast enough to spread growing wealth. TUUSULA, Finland School shooting llF stuns Finland An 18-year-old gunman opened fire at his high school in this plac- id town in southern Finland on Wednesday, killing seven other V , students and the principal before mortally wounding himself in a rampage that stunned a nation where gun crime is rare. Police were analyzing YouTube postings that appeared to antici- pate the massacre, including clips in which a young man calls for rev- olution and apparently prepares for the attack by test firing a semiauto- matic handgun. Investigators said the gunman, who was not identified, shot himself To play: C in the head after the shooting spree and e at Jokela High School in Tuusula, some 30 miles north of the capital, Helsinki. He died later at Toolo The Hospital in Helsinki. just us - Compiled from Daily wire reports 3,858 Number of American service mem- bers who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. There were four new casual- ties identified yesterday. 6 Sgt. Carletta S. Davis, 34, Anchorage, Alaska 4 Sgt. John D. Linde, 30, New York City Sgt. Derek T. Stenroos, 24, North Pole, Alaska Pfc. Adam J. Muller, 21, Under- hill, Vt 1A 's political leaders stand pat, leaving ties to hold caucus- nating conventions aries would have far icipation. Republican Party aul Anuzis said yes- ll plans on a Jan. 15 llette's ruling made there is no problem g a presidential pri- y January, and that ng," Anuzis said in a his is just a 'hiccup' s5...', 15 primary has chigan more atten- GOP presidential which pleases state But some Michigan want to dump it in uses for a variety of higan Democratic tive committee met ght in Lansing, but the agenda a sched- make the Jan. 15 pri- fficial. Party leaders to review the rul- options, state party ark Brewer said. meeting, Brewer said the ruling and options remained under review. Headed into the meeting, some Democrats were hoping to explore options aimed at appealing the judge's decision and asking the Legislature to address needed changes in the law perhaps as early as today. One possible Democratic fall- back position is a Feb. 9 presiden- tial caucus to decide delegates to the Democratic National Conven- tion. That was the plan before the January primary law was passed and remains the official plan recorded with the Democratic National Committee. The law establishing Michi- gan's Jan. 15 primary date was challenged in court by groups who said the major political par- ties should not get exclusive access to lists of which voters ask for Republican ballots and which take Democratic ones. Collette said that amounts to public money being used for private purposes. He also said it seemed inappropriate that third- party political rivals would not have equal access to the same information. East Lansing political consul- tant Mark Grebner, one of the parties that sued the state, said his intent is not to stop the pri- mary. "If someone can figure out a way to save it, that's fine with us," Grebner said. DEGREE From page 1A water resources. The program will initially include only existing classes, but as the degree grows, more classes and specialization categories will be added. "In the past, technology has been the cause of environmental prob- lems, but this program is to train engineers to enable technology to be partofthe solution," Keoleian said. Engineering junior Nelson Coo- per said the new program fills a hole in the College of Engineering's curriculum. "The program sounds great," he said. "There is a big need for it. If you're not a civil and environmen- tal engineering major - which is basically civil engineering with a few environmental classes thrown in - sustainability hardly ever gets mentioned." Clinton speaks in Detroit DETROIT (AP) - Former Presi- His visit as part of African dent Bill Clinton sees an interde- American Family Magazine's Dis- pendent world where problems tinguished Speakers Series had and successes rely on how people been rescheduled after bad weath- of various colors, backgrounds and er forced him to cancel the appear- languages look at others around ance in June. them. Terrorism, instability in the In a 45-minute talk yesterday at Middle East and other parts of the the Max M. Fisher Music Center in globe, the disparity in health care Detroit, the two-term Democratic in the United States and a "green" president challenged the audience economy were used to illustrate his with doing whatever they can to speech thatwas parthistory lesson, positively influence change. part current world politics. COURTESY OF THE ANN ARBOR POLICE A composite sketch of one of the sus- pects is Tuesday's armed robbery ROBBERY From page 1A pounds. The man was wearing a tan shearling coat trimmed with white fur. Police are asking anyone with information in the case to call the department's tip line at 734- 996-3199. Police recommend that stu- dents keep their doors locked, even when they are home. JOIN THE DAILY E-mail news@michigandaily.com Live and love... for there is no tomorrow An opera by Giacomo Puccini A modern production directed by Kay Walker Castaldo University Symphony Orchestra conducted by Martin Katz University Opera Theatre Sung in Italian with projected English translations Nov. 8 at 7:30 PM Nov. 9 & 10 at 8 PM Nov. 11 at 2 PM - Power Center Tickets $24 & $18" Students $9 w/lD League Ticket Office " 734-764-2538 P UoniverasofMchj,.n Music, Theatrc& Dance i 3 A