The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, February 6, 2008 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS NAIROBI, Kenya Peace Corps halts Kenya operations because of violence The U.S. Peace Corps said yes- terday it had temporarily sus- pended its operations in Kenya following weeks of violence over a disputed election. WhilenoPeaceCorpsvolunteers have been targeted in the violence that has engulfed Kenya since the Dec.27 elections, the Washington- based group has decided to pull out its remaining 58 volunteers, said spokeswoman Amanda Beck. Another 144 volunteers were sent home in January after the violence first erupted, she said. BAGHDAD At least 3 Iraqis killed in U.S. raid north of Baghdad At least three Iraqis were killed and one child was injured after American soldiers stormed a tiny one-room house north of Baghdad and opened fire, U.S. and Iraqi of- ficials said yesterday. Iraqi police, relatives and neighbors said a couple and their 19-year-old son were shot to death in their beds late Monday. But the U.S. military said soldiers came under fire and killed two sus- pected members of a terrorist cell in self-defense. It said it did not know who shot the woman or the child. The U.S. military reported only three dead, but Iraqi police said two young girls were wounded and one died Tuesday at a hospital. It was the second time in as many days that the U.S. military conceded involvementin the death of Iraqi civilians. WASHINGTON Senate members blast Bush's $3.1 trillion budget plan Democrats on two Senate pan- els tossed brickbats at President Bush's budget on yesterday, blast- ing it for loading debt onto the fis- cal ledger and making clear that theywould ignore his proposals to cut Medicare and Medicaid spend- ing. Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) and White House budget chief Jim Nussle kicked off the hearing with a combative exchange over the administration's fiscal perfor- mance and its failure to realisti- cally budget for the war in Iraq. "The debt has done nothing under this president's watch but skyrocket," Conrad said. WASHINGTON Intelligence chief says al-Qaida's reach is expanding Al-Qaida, increasingly shut down in Iraq, is establishing cells in other countries as Osama bin Laden's orga- nization uses a "safe haven" in Paki- stan's tribal region to train for attacks in Afghanistan, the Middle East, Africa and the United States, the U.S. intelligence chief said yesterday. "Al-Qaida remains the pre-emi- nent threat against the United States," Mike McConnell told a Sen- ate hearing more than six years after the 9/11 attacks. He said that fewer than 100 al- Qaida terrorists have moved from Iraq to establish cells in other coun- tries as the U.S. military clamps down on their activities, and "they may deploy resources to mount attacks outside the country." McConnell said while the level of violence in Iraq has dropped sharply since last year, it is going to be years before Iraq is stable. "It is not going to be over in a year. It's going to be a long time to bring it to closure," he said. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 3,947 Number ofAmerican service mem- bers who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. There were no dead service members identified yesterday. Judge rules text messages must be made public in Kilpatrick case SNOW WHITE, LANDLORD City of Detroit to appeal ruling about documents leading to mayoral scandal DETROIT (AP) - Documents related to a whistle-blower law- suit that led to a text-messaging sex scandal involving the mayor must be released to the public, a judge ruled yesterday. The city said it would appeal the ruling by Friday, the dead- line set by Wayne County Circuit Judge Robert Colombo Jr. The Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News are suing the city to determine whether there was a secret settlement in the whistle- blower lawsuit, in which a jury ruled against the city. The case eventually cost the city more than $8.5 million. Colombo yesterday indicated that indeed there was a secret set- tlement, pointing to certain docu- ments that he said wouldn't have been negotiated if there hadn't been a settlement. PRIMARY From Page 1A egates to Obama's 409 in incom- plete results. A total of 1,681 delegates were at stake in 22 states and American Samoa. Overall, that gave Clinton 706 delegates, to 611 for Obama, with 2,025 delegates required to claim the nomination in Denver at this summer's convention. Neither Clinton nor Obama pro- claimed overall victory on a Super Tuesday that sprawled from coast- to-coast, and with good reason. "I look forward to continu- ing our campaign and our debate about how to leave this country better off for the next genera- tion," said Clinton, looking ahead to the primaries and caucuses yet to come. Obama was in Chicago, where he told a noisy election night rally, "Our time has come. Our move- ment is real. And change is coming to America." LSA sophomore Kelly Bernero, chair of the University's chapter of Students for Hillary, and LSA sophomore Tom Duvall, chair of the University's chapter of Stu- dents for Obama agreed that nei- ther candidate achieved a clear victory. "Because our field is so strong, and Obama and Clinton are such strongcandidates, that we will not know who the nominee is untilthe very end," Bernero said. A few weeks ago, though, Clin- ton was the clear frontrunner, leadingObama in national polls by about 20 points. Duvall said Obama's grassroots campaign efforts and appeal to college students helped him close in on Clinton's lead. "His numbers are skyrocketing across the country," Duvall said. "The fact that Barack Obama was able to close the gap to where it is shows that the more voters see of him, the more they recognize what an impressive nominee he would be." McCain, the early Republican front-runner whose campaign nearly unraveled six months ago, won in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Missouri, Delaware and his home state of Arizona to gain all 309 delegates at stake there - well over a quarter of the "The public should be very happy with what happened today," Detroit News attorney James Stewart said after yester- day's hearing. "This information is going to come out. I think the notion the public hasn't found this out before will dismay peo- ple." "They're all smoking guns," Free Press attorney Herschel Fink said of the documents. The whistle-blower lawsuit was filed by two police officers who alleged they were fired for investigating claims that Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick used his secu- rity unit to cover up extramarital affairs. After a jury awarded damages to the officers in September, Kil- patrick promised to appeal but never did. A month later, the city made the multimillion-dollar payout. The mayor's top legal adviser, Sharon McPhail, said Colombo's order went too far. "The documents in question were never introduced into evi- dence during the lawsuit or trial, were never part of the evidence total needed for the nomination. He also put Illinois and Oklahoma in his column. Kinesiology senior Allison Sch- neider, chair of the University's chapter of Students for McCain, said McCain's frontrunner status is because of his promise to be honest and straightforward about his positions. "He's appealing because he's genuine," Schneider said. "He doesn't always give the answers they want to hear, but he gives the answers he believes to be true." Huckabee, the former gover- nor of Arkansas, won a series of Bible Belt victories, in Alabama, Georgia and Tennessee as well as his own home state. He told The Associated Press in an interview he would campaign on. "The one way you can't win a race is to quit it, and until somebody beats me, I'm going to answer the bell for every round of this fight," he said. LSA senior Amy Drumm, chair of the University's chapter of Stu- dents for Romney, said Huckabee's persistence in the race is hurting Romney's campaign. "It looks like Huckabee is only staying in it to take votes from Romney," Drumm said. "Huck- abee's supporters are social con- servatives. If he wasn't in the race, more of his supporters would swingto Romney," Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts, won a home state victory. He also took Utah, where fellow Mormons support- ed his candidacy. His superior organization produced victories in North Dakota, Montana and Minnesota, andhe, too,breathed defiance. While many believe McCain has the support and momentum to secure the Republican nomi- nation, Drumm said Romney is still the candidate of choice for social conservatives. She said McCain's support is largely from independents and Democrats who voted for McCain in open Republican primaries. "Romney is supported in most conservative circles," Drumm said. "His support comes from real Republicans and true con- servatives, not the indepen- dents." Democrats played out a his- toric struggle between Clin- ton, seeking to become the first the jury considered during the trial and many of the documents have never been in the city's pos- session," McPhail said in a state- ment. Colombo stayed his order to release the documents pending the outcome of the city's appeal. In a related action, the City Council voted yesterday to autho- rize an audit of Kilpatrick's office and agencies including the law department, which handled the city's defense of the whistle-blow- er lawsuit. "We're basically looking at legal expenses, settlement judg- ments, as well as other financial transactions, so it's wide-rang- ing," said Councilman Kwame Kenyatta. Councilwoman Sheila Cock- rel cast the lone 'no' vote on the resolution to authorize the audit, saying she believed it exceeded the council's authority. During testimony in the trial, Kilpatrick and his chief of staff, Christine Beatty, denied having an affair during 2002-03 and conspiring to have one of the offi- cers fired. female president and Obama, hop- ing to become the first black per- son to win the White House. Democratic students said they would be excited to support Obama or Clinton regardless of which candidate receives the par- ty's nomination. "So far, the Democratic sup- porters have embraced the sig- nificance of both having a woman president or our first black presi- dent," Bernero said. "Those are factors which have helped them both out equally." Clinton won at home in New York as well as in Massachusetts, New Jersey, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Arizona and Arkansas, where she was first lady for more than a decade. She also won the caucuses in American Samoa. Obama won Connecticut, Geor- gia, Alabama, Delaware, Utah and his home state of Illinois. He pre- vailed in caucuses in North Dako- ta, Minnesota, Kansas and Idaho, all caucus states. After an early series of low-del- egate, single-state contests, Super Tuesday was anything but small - its primaries and caucuses were spread across nearlyhalfthe coun- try in the most wide-open presi- dential campaign in memory. The result was a double-bar- reled set of races, Obama and Clin- ton fighting for delegates as well as bragging rights in individual states, the Republicans doing the same. Polling place interviews with voters suggested subtle shifts in the political landscape, potential- SAID ALSALA/ Daily Megan Bays of Wilson White Management (right) talks to Engineensg senio Dan Sperber (left) about off campus housing during the Housing Fair in the Michigan Union last night. ly significant as the races push on through the campaign calendar. For the first time this year, McCain ran first in a few states amongself-identifiedRepublicans. As usual, he was running strongly among independents. Romney was getting the votes of about four in 10 people who described them- selves as conservative. McCain was wining about one-third of that group, and Huckabee about one in five. Overall, Clinton was winning only a slight edge among women and white voters, groups that she had won handily in earlier con- tests, according to preliminary results from interviews with vot- ers in 16 states leaving polling places. Obama was collecting the over- whelming majority of votes cast by blacks. Clinton was gaining the votes of roughly six in10 Hispanics, and she hoped the edge would serve her well as the race turned west to Arizona, New Mexico and Cali- fornia, the biggest prize with 370 delegates. The allocation of delegates lagged the vote count by hours. That was particularly true for the Democrats, who divided theirs roughly in proportion to the pop- ular vote. Nine of the Republican contests were winner take all, and that was where McCain piled up his lead. -Suzy Vuljevic, Julie Rowe and The Associated Press contributed to this report FREE PRACTICE TR EST FEBRUARY 16,2008 ' Tss aein,.Angell oHall: LSAT 10AM- AUD A EMT930MAD x R2O OP U iwe mrd MA:10:0MA % Raserrdy I 91 - ail Ui ', -( I liato O w~od-time-charleys.com A