0 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, November 26, 2007 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LAHORE, Pakistan Former Pakistani prime minister returns as challenger Exiled former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif returned home to a hero's welcome yesterday and called on President Gen. Pervez Musharraf to end emergency rule before elections, a fresh challenge to the U.S.-backed leader. "These (emergency) conditions are not conducive to free and fair elections," Sharif told reporters at the airport after arriving from Saudi Arabia. "I think the constitu- tion of Pakistan should be restored, and there should be rule of law." Sharif, the head of one of the country's main opposition par- ties, said he had not negotiated his return with Musharraf, who over- threw him in a 1999 coup. Mush- arraf expelled Sharif when he first tried come back to Pakistan this year. WASHINGTON Syria agrees to meet at Mideast peace conference Arab holdout Syria agreed yes- terday to attend a Mideast peace conference called by President Bush to restart talks to resolve the six-decade conflict between Israel and the Palestinians, yet expecta- tions for the summit remained low. The two sides came to Washington without agreeing on basic terms for their negotiations. Bush invited the Israeli and Pal- estinian leaders to separate meet- ings at the White House today to prepare for the centerpiece of his Mideast gathering - an all-day session tomorrow in Annapolis, Md. It is to be the only time that Bush, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas meet together, and their three-way handshake is expected to be the conference's symbolic high point. Bush closes the U.S. effort with a second set of separate Israeli and Palestinian meetings at the White House on Wednesday. CARACAS, Venezuela Chavez to put relations with " Colombia on hold President Hugo Chavez said yes- terday he is putting relations with Colombia "in the freezer" after its president ended the Venezuelan leader's role mediating with leftist rebels in the neighboring country. Chavez said economic relations will be hurt, blaming actions by Colombia's U.S.-allied President Alvaro Uribe that he said were "a spit in the face." "I declare before the world that I'm putting relations with Colom- bia in the freezer because I've completely lost confidence with everyone in the Colombian govern- ment," Chavez said during a tele- vised speech. NEW YORK Broadway strike talks pick up again Negotiations resumed yester- day between striking Broadway stagehands and theater producers struggling to find a solution to their thorny, seemingly intractable labor dispute as theaters faced a third week of dark stages and mounting box-office losses. Resumption of the talks - after a week of no negotiating - had been announced the day before by Char- lotte St. Martin, executive director of the League of American Theatres and Producers, and were confirmed by the stagehands union. More than two dozen plays and musicals have been closed since Nov. 10, when the stagehands walked off the job. - Compiled from Daily wire reports U..DE A;,T I S 39875 Number of American service mem- bers who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. The following deaths were identified since Nov. 21: Sgt. Alfred G. Paredez Jr., 32, of Las Vegas, Nev. Spc. Melvin L. Henley Jr., 26, of Jackson, Miss. Michigan primary has long history of quirkiness Primary plans for 2008 draw ire from both parties LANSING (AP) - The process of choosing a presidential favorite has led Michigan down many dif- ferent paths since it held its first presidential primary in 1916. The state last held open Repub- lican and Democratic primaries in 1976, a year that saw former Mich- igan Rep. Gerald Ford easily win the GOP race over Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter beat Morris Udall on the Democratic side in an election that drew 1.8 million voters. Four years earlier, Alabama Gov. George Wallace won the Democratic primary, easily beating George McGovern and Hubert Humphrey and prompt- ing Democratic complaints that Republican voters had crossed over to vote for Wallace to embar- rass them. Partly because of such inci- dents, national Democratic rules changed after the 1976 election, and state Democratic parties had to find a way to require voters to state a party allegiance before they could participate in a presi- dential primary. In 1988, lawmakers passed a new law under which voters had to declare a party preference with their local clerks before they could vote in the presidential primary. Although 1.1 million people participated in the 1992 election won by Democrat Bill Clinton and Republican George Bush, the 18 percent turnout rate among regis- tered voters was less than half that in 1972 and 1976. Even worse, Michigan voters were incensed they had to declare a party preference and that the knowledge was public informa- tion. The outcry forced lawmakers to drop the party preference dec- laration in 1995. INTERESTED IN WEB DESIGN? WANT TO HELP INNOVATE OUR DIGITAL PRESENCE? The Daily needs you. E-mail grossman@michi- gandaily.com to apply. Democrats went back to nomi- nating their favorites through party caucuses, while Republicans continued to hold open primaries. The national front-runner, Bob Dole, easily won the 1996 GOP pri- mary. But underdog John McCain beat out eventual nominee George W. Bush in 2000, in part because Democrats crossed over to vote in the GOP primary. This year, Democratic and Republican party leaders bit on a different strategy. Instead of requiring each voter to declare a party preference that could be seen at the local clerk's office, they decided anyone could vote in either primary as long as election workers wrote down which party's ballot a voter chose and gave that information to the state parties. No public record of which ballot was chosen would be kept. State GOP Chairman Saul Anuzis and Democratic Chairman Mark Brewer said the requirement would reduce the number of vot- ers who might cross party lines to meddle in the other party's elec- tion. They also said the provision would keep a voter's neighbors or others from being able to find out which ballot a voter had chosen while increasing turnout to more than 2 million. That's far more than the rough- ly 5,000 Republicans who would choose their favorites at a presi- dential convention, or the 160,000 Democrats who voted in party caucuses in 2004. But the idea hasn't been a hit with everyone. East Lansing political con- sultant Mark Grebner and sev- eral other. people filed a lawsuit because they were unhappy that the Michigan Democratic and Republican parties will keep track of voters' names and whether they took a Democratic or GOP primary ballot but gives no public access to that information. Grebner said the knowledge is worth $5 million to $10 million and argued that access to it should be equal for everyone because it is information obtained through a publicly funded election. "We're not anti-election. We're really just anti-corrupt giveaway," he said. But the Michigan Supreme Court didn't buy that argument, issuing an opinion Wednesday that allows the primary to go for- ward. Many election clerks aren't happy with the ruling. The Michi- gan Association of County Clerks wanted the primary dropped because, with less than 60 days to go before Jan.15, it willbe difficult to guarantee that absentee voters such as military members serving overseas, the elderly and the dis- abled will be able to apply for bal- lots and return them in time. Absentee voters must ask for a Republican or Democratic bal- lot, then wait for the ballot to arrive. The high volume of holi- day mail means some voters might be unable to complete a ballot by deadline. The clerks' association and some Democratic lawmakers also argued that it's a waste of money to spend at least $10 million on the primary, especially since four of the Democratic candidates have taken their names off the ballot because Michigan violated party rules by making itself one of the earliest states on the primary cal- endar. They think the political par- ties should have stuck to their party caucuses or conventions and picked up the tab. There's also a concern that vot- ers will stay away from the polls because they don't want to give the parties a record of which ballot they took, either for privacy rea- sons or because they don't want to receive the political mailings that are sure to come. At this point, however, it looks like the new version of the Michi- gan presidential primary will go on as scheduled Jan. 15. AP PHOTO Jerri Churchill and her family offer help to their neighbors and anyone else needing it while passing by their home on Lockwood Rd. in Malibu, Calif. yesterday. After being evacuated because of the wildfires, residents began heading home yesterday. In wildfires' wake, residents return Some homes gone, but many stay intact MALIBU, Calif. (AP) -Residents began making their way back along winding canyon roads yesterday to see whether their homes survived a wind-driven wildfire a day earlier that scorched thousands of acres of hillside and 53 houses. Several homes along a road near the source of the blaze had been reduced to blackened wrecks, while many others were virtually unscathed. "There's no rhyme or reason to it," said Frank Churchill, who returned home with his wife and four children to find his white stuc- co home largely undamaged, while three neighboring homes were lev- eled. "It doesn't make sense." In all, Saturday's fast-moving wildfire destroyed 53 homes and 27 outbuildings, Gov. Arnold Schwar- zenegger said. Thirty-four other homes were damaged, and as many as 14,000 people fled the blaze, which was whipped up by hot, dry Santa Ana winds. Throughout the day yesterday, the weather worked in firefight- ers' favor. A cool breeze in from the Pacific Ocean kept tempera- tures low and moisture levels high. "The weather is perfect for us," said Los Angeles County Fire Capt. Glen Goulet. Even controlled fires, ignited late Sunday to clear remaining scrub, burned lazily. The fire, which scorched 4,720 acres - more than 7 square miles - since early Saturday, was about 70 percent contained, with full con- tainment expected Monday, said Ron Haralson, Los Angeles County fire inspector. Investigators determined that the fire, which broke out along a dirt road off a paved highway, was caused by humans but had not determined whether it was started intentionally, said coun- ty Fire Inspector Rick Domin- guez. I I FESTIVALFEATURING MTISTS SUCHNAS: SNAChYBEENIE amd much. much morel Concert Datws:March 3rd, 10th, 17th &24th Book Your Trip TodaylContact: 1, .6484849 1200426,7710 I ' Al