The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, April 15, 2008 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS ATLANTA Delta, Northwest announce merger, but face opposition If Delta and Northwest are going to create the world's largest airline, they'll first have unions to cajole, politicians to placate, and antitrust regulators to convince. Two of Northwest's largest unions immediately declared their opposition. Most importantly, the airlines will need antitrust approval from federal regulators. In 2001, an attempted merger of United Air- lines and US Airways fell apart amid antitrust concerns. Execu- tives at Delta and Northwest said they are aiming to close their deal by the end of this year, which would be before the end of the merger- friendly Bush administration. The takeover announced yester- day calls for the combined airline to be named Delta, remainbased in Atlanta, and be run by Delta CEO Richard Anderson. WASHINGTON Congress agrees Iraq should pay more for rebuilding efforts Iraq's financial free ride maybe over. After five years, Republicans and Democrats seem to have found common ground on at least one aspectof the war. From the fiercest foes of the war to the most steadfast Bush supporters, they are looking at Iraq's surging oil income and saying Baghdad should start picking up more of the tab, particularly for rebuilding hospitals, roads, power lines and the rest of the shattered country. "I think the American people are growing weary not only of the war, but they are looking at why Baghdad can't pay more of these costs. And the answer is they can," said Sen. Ben Nelson of Nebraska. Nelson, a Democrat, is draft- ing legislation with Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine and Democrat Evan Bayh of Indiana that would restrict future recon- struction dollars to loans instead of grants. ROME Berlusconi regains top spot in Italy Media billionaire Silvio Ber- lusconi won a decisive victory yesterday in Italy's parliamentary election, setting the colorful con- servative and staunch U.S. ally on course to his third stint as premier. The victory in voting Sunday and yesterdaybyparties supportingthe 71-year-old Berlusconi avenged his loss two years ago to a center-left coalition. "I'm moved. I feel a great re- sponsibility," he said in a phone call to RAI public television while monitoring election results at his villa outside Milan. BAGHDAD Iraqi troops free kidnapped reporter 0 Iraqi troops freed a kidnapped British journalist for CBS News yesterday after finding him hooded and bound in a house during a raid in a Shiite militia stronghold in Basra. Richard Butler's rescue after two months in captivity was a wel- come success story for the Iraqi military, which has been strongly criticized for its effort to impose order on Iraq's second-largest city, an oil hub 340 miles southeast of Baghdad. It came on a day in which nearly 40 people were killed or found dead nationwide - half of them in bombings near or in the northwest- ern city of Mosul. Butler, 47, was thin but in good condition and laughing as he was shown on Iraqi state television hugging well-wishers and greeting beaming Iraqi officials. - Compiled from Daily wire reports ..DE AT HS 4034 Number of American service mem- bers who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. The following deaths were identified yesterday: Army Spc. William E. Allmon, 25, Ardmore, Okla. OLYMPICS From Page 1A bone responded apathetically. "I personally don't care," he said. He can go or do what he wants, but I feel like boycot- ting is pretty extreme," he said. "It's what everyone has worked so hard for their entire life, so I don't think I would ever protest the Olympic Games if I had the choice." Senior swimmer Alex Vanderkaay, who will compete for a spot on the U.S. Olympic team at the Olympic trials in July, said people should be able to make the distinction between the games and their opinion on another nation's politics. "I definitely don't agree with what's going on over there," he said. "But I just think that mix- ing it with what is going to happen there in a couple months is making it worse." Bush has said he plans to attend the opening ceremony August 8, despite calls from Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) to boycott. If he does attend, Bush would become the first U.S. president to attend an Olympic Games hosted on foreign soil. French President Nicolas Sar- kozy said he hasn't ruled out the possibility of boycotting the open- ing ceremony of the Beijing - Olympics. German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Britain's Prince Charles and the Japanese royal family have also said they plan not to attend the Olympics. "I think a lot of people are mixing the athletics and the politics, and I think it hurts Correction The Poll in the Best of Ann Arbor issue of the Michigan Daily on April I1O was incorrect for the Best Realtor category. The Best Realtor should have been Wilson White Management. We apologize to Wilson White Management for this error. -Display Advertising Si Spring/Summer Term Apply now at the Law Library- * Non-Law Students " Law Students " S.I. Students both situations," Vanderkaay said. "I consider them completely sepa- rate, I don't look at it as having the Olympic Gamnes in China as sup- porting their political stance on a lot of issues." Catrambone and Vanderkaay said their focus remains on train- ing. One thing is clear, though: a complete boycott of the games is not an option any athlete wants. "Those athletes have worked really hard to get to that point," Vanderkaay said. "A lot of people have dedicated their entire lives to try and get to the Olympics, and for a politician to say that we can't participate in a certain event, that's just not fair." This isn't the first time that the host country of the Olympics has faced mounting pressure as the games near. In 1980, then- U.S. President Jimmy Carter pro- tested the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan by threatening that the U.S. would boycott the Mos- cow Olympics if troops hadn't been pulled out of the country by a certain time. The U.S., along with 61 other countries, didn't partici- pate in those Olympics, despite being invited. Four years later, a Soviet-led boycott of the Los Angeles Olym- pic Games -which many deemed the Soviets' revenge for the lack of participation in the previous games - spurred 16 countries to sit the contests out. Study: 'U' students, like animals, have offered sex for benefits Findings show men were more likely to offer gifts for sex By BETH WITTENSTEIN Daily StaffReporter What would you do for a pair of Michigan-Ohio State football tickets? Some University students might offer sex for tickets to "The Game," according to Daniel Kru- ger, a research scientist in the School of Public Health. Students who participated in Kruger's study last fall reported that they had been offered - or themselves offered - sex for tick- ets to sporting events or help with laundry, vacuuming or class papers. In the study, researchers asked freshmen and sophomorestudents inintroductorypsychologyclasses to answer questions about experi- ences they might have had where sexual relations were suggested in exchange for "investment of time or effort or something of material value," Kruger said. Kruger designed the study to test his hypothesis that some stu- dents succumb to gender roles, which designate women as child- bearers and men as financial sup- porters. "Women provide the vast majority of the biological compo- nent, men bring in resources to help offspring survive," he said. The results of the study seem to support traditional gender roles, with almost twice as many men saying that they had offered resources for sex. About 27 per- cent of men said they had offered an investment at least "once or twice," as opposed to 14 percent of women. The study also showed that women are more likely to receive offers of investment for sex. About 20 percent of women reported being offered goods or services for sex, while 14 percent of men said they had. Students in the study reported that90 percentofthese exchanges occurred outside long-term rela- tionships. Kruger said this sur- prised him because the patterns are more typical in long-term relationships and marriages. "There's an implicit agreement for the exchange of resources in marriage," Kruger said. He said the findings were interesting because University students are relatively affluent. Kruger said the study suggests that students negotiate exchanges "not out of necessity, but because they can." Students seemed surprised at the results. LSA sophomore Devon Davis said he'd heard of people offering money to have another student write a paper for them;but never heard of sex being offered. LSA freshman Emmy Kirksey had a similar reaction. "That's a bit much for a paper," she said. "If it's happening, it shouldn't be," Kruger's research, published in the latest edition of Evolution- ary Psychology, lists examples of animals like primates, humming- birds and penguins trading sex for investment. . Kruger said comparing humans with animals is extremely useful as an "explanatory framework" for human activity. In the last 20 years, he said, evolutionary research has become increasingly acceptable to both academics and the general public. "There is a greater realization of the power of evolutionary the- ory and human behavior," he said. Minimum pay is $9.00 per hour! 12 www.thecourtyardsannarbor.com