The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, September 4, 2008 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, September 4, 2008 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS NEW PHILADELPHIA, Ohio Obama: GOP avoids economic talk at its convention Democratic presidential nomi- nee Barack Obama, pouncing on a top Republican aide's claim that the campaign is not about issues, said Wednesday that John McCain is trying to run away from his par- ty's bad economic record. Campaigning in eastern Ohio, Obama noted that McCain cam- paign manager Rick Davis said the election would be decided largely on voters' perceptions of the candi- dates' personalities. "This election is not about issues," Davis told The Washing- ton Post this week. "This election is about a composite view of what people take away from these candi- dates." Obama mentioned Davis' com- ment three times during a one-hour appearance at an outdoor forum on economic issues facing women. He used it to accuse speakers at the Republican convention in St. Paul, Minn., of avoiding talk about job losseshome foreclosures and other issues. NEW ORLEANS After storm, residents return home, but are left without electricity Thousands of people who fled Hurricane Gustav forced the city to reluctantly open its doors Wednes- day, but nearly 1.2 million homes and businesses across Louisiana were still without electricity, and officials said it could take as long as a month to fully restore power. As residents came home to New Orleans, President Bush returned to the site of one of the biggest fail- ures of his presidency to show that the government had turned a cor- ner since its bungled response to Katrina. Faced with traffic backups on paths into the city, Mayor Ray Nagin gave up checking ID badges and automobile placards designed to keep residents out until early Thursday. Those who returned said if the city was safe enough for 'epair crews and health care work- ers, it was safe enough for them, too. WASHINGTON U.S. to send $lbillion inaidto Georgia Pushing back against an increas- ingly aggressive Moscow, President Bush said Wednesday the U.S. will send an extra $1 billion to Georgia to help the pro-Western former So- viet republic in the wake of Russia's invasion. "Georgia has a strong economic foundation and leaders with an im- pressive record of reform," Bush said in a statement. "Our additional economic assistance will help the people of Georgia recover from the assault on their country, and con- tinuetobuildaprosperous andcom- petitive economy." Vice President Dick Cheney, due in Georgia today, planned to make the massive aid package a major highlight of his discussions with Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili. TORONTO Manhattan-sized ice shelf breaks loose in Canada A chunk of ice shelf nearly the size of Manhattan has broken away from Ellesmere Island in Canada's northern Arctic, another dramatic indication of how warmer tempera- tures are changing the polar fron- tier, scientists said yesterday. Derek Mueller, an Arctic ice shelf specialist at Trent University in Ontario, told The Associated Press that the 4,500-year-old Markham Ice Shelf separated in early August and the 19-square-mile shelf is now adrift in the Arctic Ocean. - Compiled from Daily wire reports U.S.LDAH 4,152 Number of American service mem- bers who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. There were no deaths were identified yesterday. After 28 years, Michigan town helps Cambodian man get American citizenship Prosecutors: We're preparing for Kilpatrick to plead guilty Sok had community residents quiz him to prepare for test UNION CITY, Mich. - When Keo Sok, a custodian at Union City Middle School, traveled to Detroit to take his U.S. citizenship exam in July, it wasn't just the 100 history and governmentquestions running through his head. He had hopes of this small town riding on him. "Keo mentioned how much pres- sure he felt because the community was behind it," eighth-grade social studies teacher Larry Bruce said, "and how if he would have went there and things wouldn't have gone right...." 'Sok finished the sentence: "Then I fail the whole town." Sok, now a resident alien, was born in Cambodia and has been living in Union City for almost 28 years. When teachers and adminis- trators at this roughly 1,100-stu- dent district decided to help the 48-year-old become a U.S. citizen last winter, Sok, having failed once about 20 years ago, accepted the challenge with a bit of apprehen- sion. Bruce and Klaudia Fisher, a fifth-grade teacher, led the charge - getting students to take the daunting citizenship exam them- selves and posting new sample' questions on a cafeteria bulletin board every day. "Sometimes at lunchtime,, I sit down to eat, and (the students) ask and I have to answer it," Sok said. "That's the only way I learn. When you get old, you hardly remember things, and if you have a kid asking over and over and over, you will be remembering." The learning process went both ways. Students also learned about Cambodia's people and past. Sok was on hand to provide a harrowing history lesson him- self. In 1975, Sok's parents and sib- lings were executed by the Khmer Rouge, the radical Marxist group that controlled Cambodia from 1975 to 1979. The Khmer Rouge is blamed for the deaths of an estimated 1.7 million people from starvation, murder and overwork. "They lined them up. Kill them," Sok said. "It took me twenty-some years to get over it." Sok's father was a high-ranking Cambodian military official with the previous regime. As Sok put it, his family "they said was a root that they pull out so it don't grow back." Sok, who was living with his aunt at the time, changed his last name to hide his identity and escape what would have been his own execution. He worked, as did almost all Cambodians under Pol Pot, in labor camps from dawn to dusk on a handful of rice each day. The work ethic co-workers rave about was forged in the fields, where those who lagged behind were called into a "meeting" and killed. In 1979, at the age of 18, Sok and three others realized that with the Vietnamese army invading Cam- bodia, there would be little chance to survive if they stayed put. They escaped and started the 150-mile trek from Phnom Penh to the Thai border. Caught in the crossfire of Viet- namese and Cambodian soldiers, Sok didn't "walk straight on the road; I walk around all the boul- ders and mountains and stuff." After two months and four gunshot wounds, Sok and the others made it safely to Thailand. From a Thailand Red Cross sta- tion, Sok and his new wife, whom he married after he arrived in Thailand, went to the Philippines and made it to the U.S. through the sponsorship of three Union City area churches in 1980. Sok found work at Union City Industries Inc. doing maintenance and started working part-time at Union City Community Schools in 1989. He accepted a full-time cus- todian position in 1996. All four of his children have graduated from or are attending Union City schools. His 28-year- old son, David, has served two tours of duty as a U.S. Marine in Iraq. And while he has since separated from his wife, he has had the steady support of Union City, a small, rural town of about 1,800 people. "When Keo came in, and the kids had been told ahead of time for the first time what was going on, they just cheered," Fisher said. "It was so cool because they just have such a great relationship with him. They really wanted him to succeed." "It was one of those things where (you say), 'Hey, you know, one of our janitors - a guy you've been seeing every day - let me tell you a little bit about his story and what he went through," Bruce said. On July 21, Sok went to Detroit and took the test, a 100- question oral exam given by an Immigration official. His $675 application fee was covered by donations from Union City resi- dents. "I missed one question," Sok said. "I got mixed up with the one that was when the (Declara- tion) of Independence was writ- ten. I missed on that one, but that's it." Sok was quick to point out that he is not an official U.S. cit- izen yet. He still must take his oath of allegiance, which might take up to two or three months. But, he said, "I got the hard part done." Mayor's legal team acknowledges potential plea deal is in the works DETROIT (AP) - Prosecutors accusing Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick of lying on the witness stand to cover up an extramarital affair with a top aide said Wednes- day that a plea deal is expected" soon in the case, though the may- or's attorneys insisted one had not been struck yet. The surprise development came as Gov. Jennifer Granholm heard evidence in an extraordi- nary hearing that could result in the married mayor's removal from office. The outcome of the criminal case does not necessar- ily bear on the governor's hear- ing. The City Council is trying to have Kilpatrick removed, saying it was misled when it approved an $8.4 million settlement last year with fired police officers. Council members say they didn'tknow the deal carried secret provisions to keep a lid on steamy text messages between Kilpatrick and Christine Beatty, who was his chief of staff, on city-issued pag- ers. The office of Wayne County prosecutor Kym Worthy said Wednesday that an agreement was expected soon, first saying it would come that afternoon and then later saying it would be at 9 a.m. Thursday at a previ- ously scheduled docket confer- ence. Kilpatrick attorney James Thomas, who was at the gover- nor's hearing Wednesday, agreed it was "apparent that they are close" to a plea deal but said it was not a sure thing. "That plea deal has not been consummated," Thomas said after the hearing, which Kilpatrick was not required to attend. A spokes- woman said he was working on city business. Kilpatrick spokesman Chris Garrett told The Associated Press that a statement from the mayor's office was not expected Wednes- day night, but added that negotia- tions with the prosecutor's office "are continuing." The mayor would automati- cally be expelled from office if he is convicted of a felony. But even if he avoids a felony conviction in the perjury case and persuades the governor not to remove him, he still faces assault charges stem- ming from a confrontation in July. Doug Baker, a special pros- ecutor with the attorney general's office handling the assault case, said Tuesday that his office wasn't part of any negotiations with the Wayne County prosecutor's office. Granholm spokeswoman Liz Boyd said the governor's lawyers were informed about the possible guilty pleafrom the mayor. "Thehearingwillcontinueuntil the office is vacated," Boyd said. She said it was expected to resume Thursday one hour after the con- ference in the perjury case. The settlement between the city and the mayor in the case of the fired police officers was the product of an "incredible pattern of deception and nondisclosure," council lawyer William Goodman said at Wednesday's removal hear- ing. "It was settled to cover up the truth. It was fast and it was rushed," he said. "These are not minor trans- gressions, Gov. Granholm. They have brought this city to a grind- ing halt," Goodman said. "The mayorhas often expressed his love for the city of Detroit.... But to paraphrase Oscar Wilde, men often kill the thingthey love," he said. "Be assured this city has not been killed yet, but it is gravely wounded, and the mayor must be removed." In her opening statement, the mayor's attorney, Sharon McPhail, covered much ground, some of it unrelated to the case at hand. She predicted unnamed coun- cil members who want Kilpatrick kickedoutareawaitingindictment on "far worse charges." McPhail urged the governor to resist calls to fire the mayor. "It's too stupid to be plausible" that Kilpatrick came up with a secret pact to cover up embar- rassing text messages, McPhail said. Obama.campaign: Kilpatrick should quit DETROIT (AP) _ A spokes- man for Barack Obama says the Democratic presidential candidate thinks embattled Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick should quit for his city's good. Brent Colburn said in an e-mail Wednesday night "Senator Obama believes that Mayor Kilpatrick's ongoing troubles and the serious charges against him have been a distraction that the city cannot afford." Democratic Governor Jen- nifer Granholm opened a hear- ing Wednesday on whether to remove Kilpatrick, and the Democratic mayor also faces two separate criminal prosecu- tions. Colburn says Obama "believes it is time for the mayor to step aside so that the city can move forward and get back to business." John McCain's campaign- declined immediate comment. 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