The Michigan Daily - michiganclaily.com Tuesday, September 30, 2008 - 7 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, September 30, 2008 - 7 . After bailout plan failure, McCain, Obama play blame game on the campaign trail Both candidates supported failed bailout proposal By MICHAEL D. SHEAR and DAN BALZ The Washington Post WEST DES MOINES, Iowa - Reacting to the House's defeat of a $700 billion bailout proposal Monday, Sens. Barack Obama and John McCain called on Congress to pass a new bill and then sought to blame each other for the dead- lock on Capitol Hill. McCain found himself in a par- ticularly awkward position after bragging about his role in building a coalition behind the economic rescue package Monday morning - hours before it was defeated. In a curt statement after the measure was rejected and stocks plummeted, McCain said he had "worked hard to play a con- structive role" in its passage and declared that "now is not the time to fix the blame." But McCain and his top aides then accused Obama and the Democratic leadership in Con- gress of orchestrating the bill's failure to embarrass McCain, even though many more House Republicans voted "no" than did Democrats. "Sen. Obama and his allies in Congress infused unnecessary partisanship into the process," McCain said in a statement to the media during a stop in Iowa. He took no questions. PROVOST From Page 1 LSA senior Sabrina Shin- gwani, the president of MSA, said she meets with Sullivan several times each month. She said the provost's openness to students will let the assembly represent students by helping BAILOUT From Page 1 a "huge number" of constituents registered their opposition to the plan, which he felt was hastily produced. "Wecandobetterandweshould do better so the people across America aren't overwhelmed with trying to bail out Wall Street or I should say, the CEOs of Wall Street," Knollenberg said. "That's really what irks most people in my district." Walberg, who is also targeted by Democrats, said the bill was "nothing more than an expensive, taxpayer-funded band aid that will not solve our long-term eco- nomic problems." Walberg, who faces Democrat Mark Schauer in November, said he was "extremely disappointed" in President Bush for refusing to consider other options and blasted Treasury Secretary Henry Paul- son's role in the legislation. Paulson "failed the American people by refusing alternative plans, demanding unprecedented power for the Treasury Depart- LSAT From Page 1 than 150 applications," she said. To encourage participation among those who are qualified, the Law School will waive the nor- mal $60 application fee. Similar admissions programs are already in place at Georgetown University and George Washing- ton University. Zearfoss said the 3.8 GPA requirement was determined by previous admissions data from the Law School. "We analyzed the data and we concluded that people who matric- ulate here whose GPAs are 3'S and above always do well, not .merely graduate, but they always turn in a solid performance regardless of what their LSAT was when they entered," Zearfoss said. "So we concluded that for this group, what we really need to know is their GPA and what their curricu- lum is like." In place of an LSAT score, Zear- foss said the Law School is looking for more than just a competitive GPA. Ideal Wolverine Scholars, she continued, are students who have taken full course loads and had challenging curriculums dur- ing all their undergraduate years A His top domestic policy adviser, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, later said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was to blame for giving an overly par- tisan speech just before the vote. "Today, when it became clear that he was coming close to having a victory, they killed it," Holtz- Eakin said. Obama spokesman Bill Burton said, "Today's inaction in Congress as well as the angry and hyper- partisan statement released by the McCain campaign are exactly why the American people are disgusted with Washington." Yet, at a rally in Colorado, Obama highlighted his efforts to improve the plan and sought to link McCain to the economic crisis. "I read the other day that Sen. McCain likes to gamble. He likes to roll those dice. And that's okay. I enjoy a little friendly game of poker myself every now and then," Obama said. "But one thing I know is this - we can't afford to gamble on four more years of the same disastrous eco- nomic policies we've had for the last eight." Obama also urged lawmakers to quickly return to the table to sta- bilize the nation's economy. Like McCain, Obama had offered cau- tious support for the measure over the weekend. "DemocratsandRepublicansin Washington have a responsibility to make sure an emergency res- cue package is put forward that can at least stop the immediate problems that we have," Obama said. "One of the messages I have to Congress is - get this done, craft important University poli- cies. "What Provost Sullivan is doing with the Budget Com- mittee is exactly in line with what our goals are," she said. "We want to increase student participation in administrative decisions." Shingwani said Sullivan first* approached-her last spring about Democrats. Republicans, step up to the plate." The repercussions for the presidential campaign are uncertain and potentially dra- matic as both candidates search for the right way to navigate the most severe economic crisis in decades just five weeks before Election Day. Aides in both camps said the candidates immediately called Treasury Secretary Henry M.. Paulson Jr. and others, but neither McCain or Obama announced plans to return to Washington. The House adjourned for the Jew- ish holidays and is not scheduled to return to session until Thurs- day. Obama and McCain had maneuvered to be able to claim some credit for passage of a finan- cial rescue plan. But Ross Baker, a political scientist at Rutgers Uni- versity, said McCain would feel the fallout over the House's rejec- tion of the measure far more than Obama. "There's nothing worse than prematurely claiming victory and then finding you've been handed a defeat," Baker said. "It's a sign of the impulsiveness that he's often been accused of." McCain's political situation is complicated by disarray in the Republican Party. The split between Senate Republicans and President Bush, both of whom supported the plan, and House Republicans, who largely opposed it, make McCain's effort at trying to show leadership over his party all the more difficult. the committee when she asked if there was a way to get more stu- dent input for budgetary matters. The committee is expected to have its first meeting toward the end of October. When asked if she had any other student-oriented commit- tees in mind, Sullivan laughed. "Right now, I think that's going to be enough," she said. VOTING From Page 1 with the University. In the e-mail to Egler and Lie- berman, Housingstaff member Lee Evilsizer said she wanted to meet with the two chairs "to reiterate the expectations around register- ing students to vote and to discuss whether the program will contin- ue." While VoiceYour Vote is the only group University Housing allows to register students in residence halls, several groups are working to register voters on campus. Those include the University's chapter of the College Democrats, the Obama campaign, the nonprofit group Progressive Future, the political Action Committee MoveOn.org. The College Democrats have not coordinated registration drives in the dorms, but it encourages its members to talk with their friends and neighbors about Obama and help them register to vote. In the e-mail, Evilsizer said she received a complaint from a resi- dent who said someone who offered to help him or her register to vote. The student wrote that after say- ing he or she wouldn't be 18 before Election Day, "she asked if I would have voted for Obama. When I told her that I would have, she handed me a registration form and told me that 1991 could easily be mistaken for 1990 depending on my hand- writing." The e-mail sent by Evilsizer did not indicate where or when the incident occurred, or which group the person who allegedly encour- aged a student to falsify the form was affiliated with. "Clearly this is not the registra- tion efforts Housing had in mind when we agreed to allow VYV in the residence halls," Evilsizer wrote in the e-mail. Egler, who is also member of the College Democrats, said she was certain a Voice Your Vote volunteer wouldn't express support for any candidate or encourage a student to violate federal law. "Before sending volunteers out, we debrief them on Michigan vot- ing laws," Egler said. "We trust in the integrity of students who are willing to go out there and register voters with a non-partisan organi- zation." The College Democrats execu- tive board member said the group trains anyone registering voters in election law. "Any College Democrat explicit- ly knows not to do that," the mem- ber said. "We don't teach that. We don't endorse that." Lieberman, Egler and MSA President Sabrina Shingwani were the only Voice Your Vote represen- tatives allowed to knock on doors during last night's scheduled drive in Couzens Hall. In the e-mail, Evilsizer said Housing Security officers would escort from the building anyone not authorized to register voters in the dorms. The three Voice Your Vote rep- resentatives were able to register seven students at Couzens, but most people they encountered were already registered, Egler said. The group has registered about 750 people so far, Egler said. Voice Your Vote works with a coalition of student groups that run the gamut from advocacy organizations like the College Democrats and Repub- licans to multicultural groups like the Indian American Student Organization. The coalition has registered a total of about 4,500 voters - with the College Demo- crats accounting for 3,800 of those. On Oct. 9, 2000, Voice Your Vote had registered about 5,000 vot- ers, according to an article in The Michigan Daily. Egler said she was frustrated when she got the e-mail from Evil- sizer Friday, given that little more than a week remained before the voter registration deadline at the time. "This is the last straw of bureau- cratic roadblocks," Egler said. The College Democrats execu- tive board member, who has worked for Voice Your Vote, said University Housing was hesitant to allow rep- resentatives from Voice Your Vote to register in the dorms. The mem- ber said Housing resisted efforts to put to put drop boxes for registra- tion forms in University buildings. "This is a crucial time and they've already delayed and stalled enough," the member said. "The VYV dorm storms should have hap- pened weeks ago. Then they put it right before the registration dead- line. It's a huge missed opportu- nity." A1998 amendment to the Higher Education Act requires universities receiving federal funding to make a "good-faith" effort to make sure all students have access to voter regis- tration forms. Allowing Voice Your Vote to register students in resi- dence halls would have helped the University stay in compliance with the mandate. But the University also encourages students to reg- ister to vote in other ways. Senior administrators have sent students a number of e-mails this fall with links to voter registration forms. Citi to buy Wachovia's banking arm Citigroup agreed Monday to buy Wachovia's banking operations for $2.1 billion in a deal arranged by federal regulators, making the Charlotte, N.C.-based bank the lat- est casualty of the widening global financial crisis. The deal greatly expands Citi- group's retail franchise - giving it a total of more than 4,300 U.S. branches and $600billion in depos- its - and secures its place among the U.S. banking industry's Big Three, along with Bank of America Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. %it it cn- e aast - it ivmrn Inc. said it will slash its quarterly dividend in half to 16 cents. It also will dilute existing shares by sell- ing $10 billion in common stock to shore up its capital position. In addition to assuming $53 bil- lion worth of debt, Citigroup will absorb up to $42 billion of losses from Wachovia's $312 billion loan portfolio, with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. agreeing to cover remaining losses, if any. Citigroup also will issue $12 billion in pre- ferred stock and warrants to the FDIC. The reainder ofWa bsa will include its asset management,retail brokerage and certain select parts ofitswealthmanagement business- es, including the Evergreen and Wachovia Securities franchises. It will continue tobe a public compa- ny under the Wachovia name. The agreement comes after a fevered weekend courtship in which Citigroup and Wells Fargo & Co. both were reportedly study- ing the books of Wachovia Corp., which was weighed down by losses linked to its ill-timed 2006 acqui- sition of mortgage lender Golden Wret Finan cl Corn. ment and asking the American people for a blank check to cover speculative investments and mis- takes made by investment bank- ers," Walberg said. Kilpatrick, whose Detroit dis- trict has struggled with high unemployment, said the proposal failed to help struggling hom- eowners and "does not help the little person who needs it." Several lawmakers said they hoped the administration would help shape a revamped proposal, which they said was needed to calm financial markets and pro- tect taxpayers' money. "It's very frustrating to know that there are very doable solu- tions," Rogers said. Supporting the plan were Dem- ocrats John Dingell of Dearborn, Dale Kildee of Flint and Sander Levin of Royal Oak. Republicans Dave Camp of Midland, Fred Upton of St. Joseph and Vernon Ehlers backed the plan. Dingell noted that the Trea- sury Department would have the authority to pu'chase traditional car loans as part of the bailout, a key concern for the domestic auto industry. Lawmakers have said auto loans could dry up if Con- gress fails to act on the bailout. Dingell said they "took a bad piece of legislation and they have significantly improved it to make it much better." Upton said the bill was not per- fect, but it "protected Michigan's working families on Main Street rather than the fat cats on Wall Street." Ehlers said the "consequences of inaction could rival the Great Depression of the 1930s: Credit cards not working, employers going out of business because they are unable to borrow money, and-employees not receiving pay- checks." "Congress must work in a bipar- tisan manner in renewed efforts to find a solution. Partisanship has no place in this debate. The stakes are far too high," Ehlers said. Peters, who is challenging Knollenberg, said in a statement he also would have opposed the bill because it would have bailed out foreign banks, lacked suf- ficient reforms and had "weak protections against using tax- payer money to fund golden para- chutes." Every week, 8 a.m.-noon at the University. Transfer students and students who have already taken the LSAT are not eligible for the program. And for undergrads who don't make the cut as Wolverine Schol- ars, the academic profile of this year's entering class - with an average undergraduate OPA of 3.7 and an average LSAT score of 169, which translates to the 97th percentile among LSAT test tak- ers across the country - provides a few indications of what it takes to get accepted to the University's Law School. Though most application dead- lines normally arrive during sec- ond semester of a student's senior year, this year's Wolverine Schol- ars have an application deadline of May 15, 2009. These students will receive word of their admission decision by July 21, which Zear- foss said leaves plenty of time to consider other schools and options if they aren't accepted to the Law School. "We came up with this schedule particularly taking into account the needs of the applicants," Zearfoss said. "And we will make the decision in time so that they can still register for the October LSAT." The July decision date puts Wolverine Scholars about seven months ahead of most regular law school application deadlines and almost four months ahead of most early-decision deadlines that begin around November. Students who aren't accepted as Wolverine Scholars may also reap- ply to the Law School during the regular admissions cycle. LSA senior Charles Ogunro, co-president of the Michigan Pre- Law Society, said he thought the program would encourage young- er students to take tougher classes and get better grades. "(Students) will be studying a lot harder if they know they have a chance to get into the Univer- sity of Michigan Law School with a very good GPA and not have to take the LSAT," Ogunro said. "That's definitely an incentive to study." Despite the potential payoff of taking difficult classes and maintaining a high GPA, Zear- foss said she doesn't expect the program to change the way most students approach their aca- demics. "We didn't make up the idea that the GPA is an important ele- ment in the application process," Zearfoss said. "So I find it hard to believe that this will have any major effect on the way people run their lives." Free coffee Free bagels Free magazines Free WI-FI Fall 2008 October 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 November 5, 12, 19 Winter 2009 January 14, 21, 28 March 4, 11, 18, 25 Att U-M students welcome. The Alumni Center is located at 200 Fletcher St., at the corner of Fletcher and Washington, next to the Michigan League. Visit www.umalumni.com/students for more information on student programs! ALUMNIASSOCIATION UNIVERSITY 0F MICHIGAN