The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, February 5,2408 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS DIMONA, Israel Palestinian suicide bomber kills Israeli woman, injures 11 A Palestinian bomber blew him- selfup yesterday in this desert town near Israel's nuclear reactor, killing an Israeli woman and wounding 11 people in the first suicide attack inside Israel in a year. Police killed a second attacker after a doctor found a suicide vest while treating him for wounds suf- fered in the blast. The attack fueled Israel's fears that Gaza militants would exploit a border breach with Egypt to sneak into Israel. Militants claimed the bombers entered Israel through the porous Egyptian border, about 35 miles from Dimona, and said more militants were inside Israel waiting to strike. In Gaza, gunmen fired in the air and relatives of the bombers passed out sweets to celebrate the bomb- ing. WASHINGTON $3.1 trillion budget plan would cause deep federal deficits The record $3.1 trillion budget proposed by President Bush yes- terday would produce eye-pop- ping federal deficits, despite his attempts to impose politically wrenching curbs on Medicare and eliminate scores of popular domes- tic programs. The Pentagon would receive a $36 billion, 8 percent boost for the 2009 budget year beginning Oct. 1, even as programs aimed atthe poor would be cut back or eliminated. Half of domestic Cabinet depart- ments would see their budgets cut outright. Slumping revenues and the cost of an economic rescue package will combine to produce a huge jump in the deficit to $410 billion this year and $407 billion in 2009, the White House says, just shy of the record $413 billion set four years ago. GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba New details emerge in Canadian terror suspect's case A Canadian terror suspect was shot twice in the back by U.S. forces during a 2002 firefight in Afghani- stan after he allegedly killed an American commando, according to a U.S. fighter's eyewitness account revealed yesterday. Omar Khadr, who was 15 at the time, already had been injured by shrapnel in his chest and was fac- ing away from the fight when he was shot inside an al-Qaida com- pound, according to the unidenti- fied U.S. fighter. Defense attorneys said the new details would help them make a case that Khadr should not be tried before a military tribunal because his alleged offenses occurred in a combat setting - and there- fore should not be considered war crimes committed by an irregular "enemy combatant." LANSING Services set for ex-Mich. politician Services have been set for former Democratic Senate Majority Leader William B. Fitzgerald Jr., who died Sunday from colon cancer at his home in Grosse Pointe Farms at the age of 65. Mass will take place at 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Paul on the Lake Catholic Church in Grosse Pointe Farms. He will lie in state from 9:30 a.m. until Mass begins. Visitation will be held from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. Wednesday at Chas. Verhey- den Funeral Home in Grosse Pointe. Fitzgerald was one of the most visible figures in Michigan politics throughoutthe 1970s,whenheserved in the state House and Senate. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 3945 399. Number of American service members who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associ- ated Press. The following death was identified yesterday: Spc. Matthew F. Straughter, 27, St. Charles, Mo. Businessman Romney paying commission to student fundraisers McCain assails Vomnev's cOnservatism during speech Some critical of GOP candidate's effort to court young voters By DANIEL STRAUSS Daily StaffReporter In an effort to entice college students to support his run for the presidency, former Massa- chusetts governor Mitt Romney is paying students a 10 percent commission when they raise at least $1,000 for his campaign. The programis amove to attract young voters, a demographic that has favored fellow presidential candidate John McCain on the Republican side and Sen. Barack Obama on the Democratic side. While more than 400 college students from campuses across the country have raised money for Romney and received divi- dends in return, none were from the University of Michigan. Amy Drumm, chair of the Uni- versity's chapter of Students for Romney, said the program has caused more students to become involved with the Romney cam- paign, but that the group has only raised a few hundred dollars. Because it hasn't raised $1,000 yet, the University's chapter hasn't received any funds from the Romney campaign. Drumm attributed the small amount of funds raised to lack- luster student involvement. She said student volunteers often go door to door or make phone calls to garner support for their candidate, but that they usu- ally don't contribute financially to campaigns. "You don't generally look at students and think, 'Oh they'll go out and raise a lot of money for me,' " Drumm said. "So I think that (Romney's plan) was kind of the push to get them more involved in the campaign." Drumm said the lack of student fundraising on campus stems from the fact that many students are involved in other extracur- ricular activities besides political groups. Rarely have presidential candi- dates offered fundraising incen- tives as explicit as Mitt Romney's, which some are calling a busi- ness-style approach to politics. Political Science Prof. Kenneth Kollman said the fundraisingplan reflects Romney's background as the business-oriented politician. "I think it just reflects the way he thinks about the world," Koll- man said. "He's been a very suc- cessful businessman. It's maybe unusual. I don't think it's all that different than paying someone a salary on your staff whose job it is to raise money for you. It's just so overtly along the lines you would use if you were trying to sell shoes at Macy's." Some representatives from other campus student groups think Romney's fundraising strategy won't translate into sup- porting among young people. "I think it's innovative, yes," LSA senior Kelly Bernero, chair of the University's chapter of Students for Hillary, said. "How- ever my criticism of the program is that he has not energized vot- ers by his rhetoric or his policies. He's energizing them by handing out money," Bernero said. Most National polls show McCain as the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nom- ination, with Romney in second place. LSA senior Allison Schneider, chair of Students for McCain, could not be reached for comment yesterday. Both McCain and Romney will be campaigning throughout the day - known as Super Tuesday - as 21 states vote in Republican primary elections. If McCain is largely success- ful today, he could secure the Republican Party's nomination. He delivered a blow to Romney last week, winning the Florida primary. (AP) --Republican John McCain assailed Mitt Romney's conserva- tive credentials on the eve of the Super Tuesday presidential pri- maries, going on national televi- sion with a new campaign ad that claims Romney "was against Ron- ald Reagan before he was for him." McCain had eased up on his criticism of the former Massa- chusetts governor since winning the primary in Florida last week and had begun acting like a gen- eral election candidate, focusing his harsh rhetoric on Democratic rivals. But with hours to go before voting began in more than 20 states from coast to coast, McCain unloaded on Romney. The 30-second ad airing on national cable television shows Romney distancing himself from Ronald Reagan, patron saint of modern conservatism, in a 1994 debate when he was challenging Democratic Sen. Edward M. Ken- nedy of Massachusetts. "Look, I was an independent during the time of Reagan-Bush. I'mnottryingto returnto Reagan- Bush," Romney says in the ad foot- age. An announcer then intones, "If we can't trust Mitt Romney on Ronald Reagan, how can we trust him to lead America?" WANT TO JOIN THE DAILY? E-mail herring@michigandaily.com Google could play a role in Microsoft's bid for Yahoo SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Microsoft Corp.'s $41 billion takeover bid appears to have backed Yahoo Inc. into a corner, leaving the struggling Internet pioneer with the unpleasant choice of selling to a detested rival or pursuing other agoniz- ing alternatives likely to require the help of an even fiercer foe, Google Inc. At least that appeared to be the consensus emerging among analysts yesterday as Wall Street awaited Yahoo's response to last week's unsolicited offer from Microsoft. Yahoo says its board is going to take its time reviewing Micro- soft'sbid alongwithother options that could keep the Sunnyvale- based company independent. "At the end of the day, I don't think they are going to be able to turn down Microsoft," predicted technology investment banker Peter Falvey of Revolution Part- ners, echoing a widely held senti- ment. But if Yahoo spurns Micro- soft, analysts believe it probably will have to swallow its pride and forge an advertising partnership with Google if the alliance could win antitrust clearance. Under this scenario, Yahoo would rely on Google to run its search engine while join- ing thousands of other Web sites that depend on the Inter- net search leader for a steady stream of ad revenue generated from text-based links that pro- duce commissions with every click. But getting Google's adver- tising help probably wouldn't be enough to trump Microsoft's offer by itself. To placate shareholders, Yahoo probably would have to line up enough money to pay a special dividend or perhaps even take the company private in a lev- eraged buyout. Going private might be even more painful for Yahoo's 14,300 employees than a sale to Micro- soft. To help repay the more than $20 billion debt that would be incurred in a leveraged buyout, Yahoo would likely have to fire about 4,500 employees, or 31 percent of its work force, Stifel Nicolaus analyst George Askew estimated yesterday. Yahoo also probably would have to sell about $12.5 billion worth of investments in sev- eral promising Internet compa- nies, including Alibba.com and Yahoo Japan. --LSAT GRE GMAT MlCAT OAT OAT PCAT TOET FREE PRACTICE s~ea e 6'eTEST FEBRUARY 16, 2008 Ali Tests are in Angell Hal: LSAT:10:00AM - AUD A OGMAT: 9:30AM - AUD C T1 230PM-AUDD To play: Complete the grid so that every row, column and every 3x3 box Contains the digits 1 to 9. There is no guessing or math involved, just use logic to solve. Good Luck and enjoy! for more information call 734/615-6449 The University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts presents a public lecture and reception Five Filmings of an Historical Novel D. R. Shackleton Bailey Collegiate Professor of Greek and Latin Tuesday, February 5, 2008 4:10 pm Rackham Amphitheater