The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS BAGHDAD With violence rising, Iraqi prime minister issues ultimatum Iraq's prime minister warned gunmen in the oil port of Basra to surrender their weapons by Friday orfaceharshermeasures, asclashes between security forces and Shiite militia fighters spread throughout the south and in Baghdad. Despite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's ultimatum yesterday, government troops in Basra were having trouble making inroads into neighborhoods that the radical Shi- ite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army has controlled for years. Res- idents spoke of militiamen using mortar shells, sniper fire, roadside bombs and rocket-propelled gre- nades to fight off security forces. Al-Maliki, a Shiite, remained in Basra to supervise a crackdown against the spiraling violence be- tween militia factions vying for control of the center of Iraq's vast oil industry, located near the Ira- nian border. LANSING Senate proposes K-12 funding boost The state Senate has passed a spending plan for K-12 public schools. Schools would get $71 to $142 more per student, with lower- funded districts getting more and higher-funded schools getting a lower increase. Governor Jennifer Granholm proposes increasing state aid be- tween $108 to $216 per student, but the Senate is worried tax revenues will come in lower than expected. Republicans who control the Senate on Wednesday rejected Democrats' attempts to create small high schools in districts with failing students. The GOP instead supported giv- ing every district another $20 per student to spend on buildings. The K-12 budgetbill heads to the Democratic-led House. Lawmakers hope to finish the state budget by July. BEIJING Chinese officials decry U.S. delivery of fuses to Taiwan China strongly protested to the United States yesterday over the mistaken delivery of fuses for long- range missiles to Taiwan, the latest incident involving arms sales to the island to roil relations between Bei- jing and Washington. In a statement posted on the For- eign Ministry's Web site, spokes- man Qin Gang said China sent a protest to Washington expressing "strong displeasure." "We ... demand the U.S. side thoroughly investigate this mat- ter, and report to China in a timely matter the details of the situation and eliminate the negative effects and disastrous consequences cre- ated by this incident," Qin said "We . demand the U.S. side thoroughly investigate this matter, and report to China in a timely matter the details of the situation and elimi- nate the negative effects and disas- trous consequences created by this incident," Qin said. CHARLOTTE, N.C. Report: Pilot fired gun in cockpit by mistake A US Airways pilot whose gun fired inside a cockpit said he was trying to stow the weapon as the crew got ready to land, according to a police report obtained yesterday. The pilot didn't tell air traf- fic control about the shooting or say the bullet had punctured the cockpit until after the plane landed safely at Charlotte-Douglas Inter- national Airport, the report said. Photos obtained by The Associated Press show a small exit hole on the plane's exterior below the cockpit window. - Compiled from Daily wire reports ELECTIONS From Page 1A going to run a full slate, naturally that piques people's attention a little more," he said. LSA junior Maricruz Lopez, who ran unsuccessfully as the vice presidential candidate for the Defend Affirmative Action Party, said a debate between the two presidential candidates would have increased voter turnout. In 2007, the two presiden- tial candidates participated in a debate on the student-run televi- sion station WOLV-TV. The sta- tion also held a debate two years ago but the tape was lost and the debate never aired. Former MSA President Moham- mad Dar argued that the lack of a debate had little to do with low voter turnout. He cited the 2006 election, pointing out that turn- out was high even though the tape was lost. Butch Oxendine, president of the American Student Govern- ment Association, said turnout is higher when students connect with the candidates face to face. "The number one way Student Governments improve their voter turnout is by connecting with fel- low students throughout the year, showing them that SG does some- thing tangible that matters to them," Oxendine said in an e-mail. "If it can prove that it is seeking their opinion and trying to serve fellow students, then SG has a chance of increasing voter turnout when elections roll around." Rackham student Kate Stenvig, who ranunsuccessfully as DAAP's presidential candidate, said recent student government scandals influenced the lackluster turnout. "I think that has to be because of a general distaste with MSA, because people are reading about scandal after scandal and people don't really want to participate with it," she said. Sohoni agreed, saying the body needs to focus on regaining stu- dents' trust. "If students' only interaction with MSA is everything we've done wrong, then students aren't going to vote," he said. "We have to make MSA something that stu- dents are proud to be involved in." Stenvig said campaign restric- tions, like those on flyers advertis- ing the election also play a role in turnout. Lopez said she's pushing MSA to change. those rules for next year's elections. "Something that's completely non-partisan, informing people that the elections are happening," she said. HASH BASH From Page 1A tain time. The policy for Diag schedul- ing on SAL's website reads simply, "SAL does not give out the name of a group who has reserved the DIAG prior to you coming in - plan ahead." Felix said this means that he can't tell Kent which group has the Diag reserved on April 5, and also cannot contact that group on his behalf, because it would be vio- lating NORML's privacy. Whether or not the event is reg- istered, Brook said he is confident marijuana enthusiasts will show up that day. "The Hash Bash community is made up of all types of people, and they don't care about all this politics stuff,"he said. Birkett said because many people will come for Hash Bash, the other group planningto use the DiagApril 5 should negotiate with NORML. "They need to know what's going to happen -2,000 stoners mightjust show up at their event," he said. Organizers have used several methods to figure out which group might be holding an event that day, but to no avail. Brook said the only thing that could turn Hash Bashers away from the Diag on the first Saturday in April would be bad weather. Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Diane Brown said she wasn't concerned about Hash Bash disrupting another event. The organizers of this year's Hash Bash had planned to fly in John Sin- clair, a noted drug policy reform activist, from his Amsterdam home to speak at Hash Bash. Sinclair's Thursday, March 27, 2008 - 3A 1969 arrest for marijuana posses- sion that inspired liberal icons like John Lennon, Bob Seger and Allen Ginsberg to come to Ann Arbor for .the "Free John Now Rally" in 1971. That event evolved into today's Hash Bash. But Brook said organiz- ers may not be able to affordto bring Sinclair if they aren't able to hold a Diag bucket drive, which he said is their principal source of funding. As for obtaining a permit, Brook said he wasn't sure what route orga- nizers would take. "The only recourse we seem to have is taking the University to court, and we're trying not to do that," he said, adding that Hash Bash organiz- ers have sued the University for aper- mit before and been successful. "This is now the 37th annual Hash Bash. They've never stopped it before and they're not going to stop it now," he said. TestMasters The finest and most comprehensive LSAT preparation course in the world. Free LSA T Thursday, March 27th 150 Hutchins Hall Semin ar- 5:15 PM to 8:15 PM Learn some of our powerful methods and techniques from Jake Walker, a TestMasters LSAT instructor who scored in the 99th percentile on an actual LSAT. www.teslinastersI 80.coni 1-800-696-5728 Need some FREE time to ca//home? we'll give you 10 minutes. I Australia Chiona France India Israel Russia 188' REAt' Verizos TE__EA_ Wireless' AT&T Sprint' T-Mobild $1.29 $22.35 $5235 51.35 $ 5.15 235 5 34.35 $24.60 $ 1.29 $25 $23 5 $1.5$.0 $128 --$2235 $1235 $2235 $24.61 $1. 28 $22.35 $14.25 $34.35 $5.15 $1.28 $22.35 $3435 $74.85 $ 2-4.65 $129 $22.35 $22.35 $19.35 $ 5.10 bse o tadad ST4 'd'on*V 74.'nWirees s$2 TTnad 3/11/8. *A79C i in~ued inthe allcot 4,003 Number of American service mem- bers who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. There were no deaths identi- fied yesterday. i'- 4