The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com N ew s Friday, October 3, 2008 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom N ew s Friday, October 3. 2008 - * OBAMA From Page 1A "Invest in America, and we will invest in you," he said. "And togeth- er, we will push this country for- ward." While Obama spoke, news cir- culated that his opponent, Repub- lican presidential nominee John McCain, had decided to pull cam- paign resources ,out of Michigan to focus on winning other battle- ground states this November. The decision followed a Detroit Free Press poll showing Obama ahead of McCain by 13'percentage pointsin the state. With the state leaning toward Obama, candidates will likely shift their focus to other battleground states like Ohio or Florida, meaning fewer campaign stops in Michigan leading up to Election Day. Despite the news that the McCa- in campaign was pulling its fund- ing, Obama supporters on campus said they still hope the candidate makes an appearance at the Uni- versity of Michigan. Nathaniel Eli Coats Styer, chair of the University of Michigan Col- lege Democrats, said he anticipates a visit. "The Obama campaign considers Ann Arbor the milk and the honey of the state Michigan," Styer said. "We hope that he's goingto be here before Election Day. There's no rea- son he should not be here." George Schuttler, president of the Michigan State University Democrats, said Thursday's rally was about energizing supporters rather than swaying the undecid- ed. He said East Lansing, like Ann Arbor, is a Democratic strong- hold. "It's not necessarily about con- verting area by area, but by touch- ing voters individually," he said, "So it's not so much that Ann Arbor is in the bag, because to be fair, East Lansing's in the bag too. If you were running a campaign that way, you would never see him (Obama) in major cities because most major cities vote Democrat- ic." Schuttler also cited MSU's strong agricultural programs as a possible draw for the candidate. Peter McShane-Lewis, a Michigan State senior and an Obama sup- porter, agreed. "If his promise is 'We're going to invest in green economy and green energy sources,' then Michi- gan State stands to gain a lot from that," he said. "If you can convince rural/agriculture people that that will be part of his plan, too, then I have to think that's why he came here." Yesterday's rally was the first of several planned visits with youth voters in Michigan in the final days before the state's Oct. 6 voter registration deadline. A rally fea- turing rock musician Bruce Spring- steen is also scheduled Monday at Oestrike Stadium on the campus of Eastern Michigan University. MCCAIN From Page 1A ceded a large part of the electoral map in the heart of the industrial Midwest. The move underscored McCain's troubles on the economy, which he has acknowledged is not his stron- gest subject. It also underscored his struggle to beat an opponent who has the money to compete in many states President Bush won four years ago. Polls show Obama has pulled ahead or tied McCain in many of those states. Along with giving up Michi- gan, McCain's campaign said it is opening a front in Maine, which Kerry won four years ago and which offers four electoral votes allocated between the statewide winner and the winner in its two congressional districts. The Ari- zona senator's campaign checked advertising rates in media markets there this week. Obama already has abandoned efforts in Alaska, Georgia and North Dakota, but the Democrat has succeeded in making tradi- tional Republican strongholds Indiana, North Carolina and Virginia competitive. Both sides are battling it out in those states, where public polls show Obama ahead or tied. The two campaigns are squar- ing off with increasing intensity in Colorado, Ohio, Florida, Iowa, Missouri, Nevada, New Mexico, which Bush won in 2004, and Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and New Hampshire, which went to Kerry. Obama also is making a lim- ited effort in the traditional GOP bastion of Montana and McCain is going after Democratic-tilting Minnesota. "This is a meaningful moment strategically," said Obama cam- paign manager David Plouffe. "Their narrow path just got nar- rower." McCain had identified Michi- gan early on as a potential target, particularly in light of Obama's troubles with white working-class voters in other Rust Belt prima- ries. Obama also skipped Michigan earlier in the campaign because of a Democratic Party fight over its primary date and didn't set up a campaign organization there dur- ing the primary. But Michigan posed other diffi- culties for McCain. It has a Demo- cratic governor and the nation's highest annual average unemploy- ment rate since 2006. McCain's Senate voting record aligned with unpopular President Bush, a theme hammered by Obama, and proved too much for the GOP nominee to overcome. Republican strategists said those troubles became more acute for McCain in Michigan after the Wall Street collapse, and both public and private polls showed him sliding. On Wednesday night, the campaign decided that the $1 million a week it was spending in Michigan wasn't worth it with internal polls showing Obama approaching a double-digit lead. "It's been the worst state of all the states that are in play and it's an obvious one, from my perspec- tive, to come off the list," said Greg Strimple, a McCain senior adviser. McCain's decision didn't go over well with at least some Michigan Republicans.. "We want him in Michigan. We want him to hear our issues," said Mike Bishop, the top-ranking Republican in the 'state Legisla- ture. - Daily Staff Reporter Julie Rowe and The Associated Press contributed to this report. Kris Hamel of Detroit joins protesters gathered at the Spirit of Detroit statue to protest the government bailout of financial institutions Thursday. Bailout hopes rise as more no votes switch WASHINGTON (AP) - A wave of House converts jumped aboard the $700 billion financial industry bailout yesterday on the eve of a make-or-breaksecondvote, aslaw- makers responded to an awaken- ing amongvoterstothe pain ahead of them if stability isn't restored to the tottering economy. Black lawmakers said personal calls from Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama helped switch them from "no" to "yes." Republicans and Democrats alike said appeals from credit-starved small businessmen and the Sen- ate's addition of $110 billion in tax breaks had persuaded them to drop their opposition. "I hate it," but "inaction to me is a greater danger to our country than this bill," said GOP Rep. Zach Wamp of Tennessee, one of the 133 House Republicans who joined 95 Democrats in rejecting the mea- sure Monday, sending the stock market plummeting. Still, the outcome was far from assured. Vote-counters in both parties planned to huddle first thing Friday morning to compare notes on coming up with the dozen or so supporters needed to reverse the stunning defeat. Lawmakers were agonizing as they decided whether to. change course and back the largest govern- ment intervention in markets since the Great Depression. "I'm trying desperately to get to 'yes,"' said Rep. Carol Shea-Porter, D-N.H. Fears about an economic down- turn sent the Dow Jones indus- trials down nearly 350 points Thursday, three days after Mon- day's historic 778-point drop. The Federal Reserve reported record emergency lending to banks and investment firms, fresh evidence of the credit troubles squeezing the country ObamaandhisRepublicanrival, John McCain, phoned reluctant lawmakers for their help. McCain, in Denver, predicted the bill would pass the House. Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., told a closed-door meeting of House Democrats that he will support the bill after speaking with Obama about it. Other wavering lawmak- ers said Obama's entreaties had swayed them as well. Congressional leaders worked over wayward colleagues wher- ever they could find them. Rep. Steny Hoyer, the second- ranking House Democrat, said there was a "good prospect" of approving the measure but stopped short of predicting pas- sage - or even promising a vote. Nonetheless, a vote was expected on Friday. DEAN From Page 1A the administration to have access to student opinion. The (dean) is a critical partner in building and maintaining thatrelationship. Stu- dents should participate in the on campus interview," said Varner. The new search committee consists of representatives from' different offices throughout the University, including LSA Student Academic Affairs and the Office of New Student Programs. The committee will have three student representatives. LSA senior Daniil Gunitskiy and Mich- igan Student Assembly President Sabrina Shingwani are the two undergraduate representatives. Dentistry student Tiffany Tsang, a graduate student research assis- tant, represents the graduate stu- dents. Varner said the dean's role is to oversee organizations like the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center, Greek Life organizations, Counseling and Psychological Services, Expect Respect and Multi-Ethnic Stu- dent Affairs. The Dean of Students also directs the University Health Service and the Program on Inter- group Relations, among others. Varner said the Dean of Stu- dents also works with students on a personal level if they encounter an emergency. Last year, the Dean of Students Office helped a group of students who were temporarily displaced when a fire destroyed their off-campus house. More commonly, the office aids students adjust their courseloads if they've missed significant time due to ill- - ness. Shingwani, a member of the Dean of Students search commit- tee, emphasized the importance of the new dean in the daily lives of University students. "The search process is essen- tial to students because the (dean) directly impacts student life and oversees a lot of offices that also directly impact students," Shin- gwani said. "Students go to these offices every day." An ad for the position was psoted last September. Finalists will be selected through an inter- view process. Varner said finalists would be announced by Febru- ary 2009 and a final decision by March 2009. MAYOR From Page 1A be included in that category." The most recent Ann Arbor mayor to hold a University position was Gerald Jernigan, who served as a University investment officer during his term from 1987 to 1991. Because the state constitution grants the University autonomy, it doesn't fall within the jurisdiction of the Ann Arbor city government, meaning Hieftje doesn't have authority over University deci- sions as mayor. Councilmember Stephen Kun- selman (D-Ward 3), who works full-time at the University as an energy liaison with Plant Opera- tions, said Wall's comments were no more than "political postur- ing." "The city has no jurisdiction whatsoever over any land that the University owns," he said. "The University is like its own city - we don't have any control over them." John Mulcrone, counsel for the Michigan Senate Democrats, said a teaching job at the University wouldn't violate state conflict of interest statutes because it doesn't include administrative duties. The statutes only prohibit pub- lic positions from being filled by the same person when one posi- tion requires the "subordination, supervision or breach of duty of the other." "A mere connection with an institution doesn't implicate a conflict of interest," Mulcrone said. "Everybody's got a connec- tion." The University accounts for about 10 percent of the city's workforce. Jim Kosteva, the University's director of community relations, said he couldn't recall any Univer- sity positions having an adverse effect on city appointments. "I think the mayor and the council, irrespective of their employment, have consistently affected decisions that are in the best interest of their constitu- ents," he said. Kunselman added that the city usually does not enter into official agreements with the University, except for sewer and utility con- tracts that typically have non-ne- gotiable rates. Other college towns around the country have similar patterns of city officials working for the near- by universities, but different ways of avoiding conflicts of interest. In Berkeley, Calif., city attor- neys monitor potential violations individually by reviewing state- ments of affiliation that are kept on file for each city official. MarkNumainville,theassistant city clerk of the city of Berkeley, said at least two city commission- ers in the past 20 years have been employed at the University of California at Berkeley, which, like the University of Michigan, is the city's largest employer. "I would say it's a fairly delicate situation and the elected official just has to be very aware of their role and conflicts of interest and things like that," Numainville said. "As long as they're diligent in that regard, there shouldn't be anything that precludes them from being councilmembers or commissioners." In Madison, Wisconsin, . Eli Judge - both a University of Wis- consin student and a Madison City Councilmember - works with a group that focuses on both the school and the city. The city has an internal ethics board and also files city officials' affiliations outside of the city, such as "student". "Typically what (the elected officials) do, is they will abstain from voting on anything that deals directly with their position," said Lisa Veldran, administrative assistant to Madison's city coun- cil. "Typically, it's a case-by-case kind of thing." SAT OCT 4 @ MIDNIGHT FOR MORE INFO VISIT MYSPACE.COM/STATETHEATREA2 TELL US WHAT YOU KNOW. IF YOU HAVE A NEWS TIP OR ANY FEEDBACK FOR THE NEWS SECTION, E-MAIL NEWS@MICHIGANDAILY.COM Shop. Donate. Volunteer. Offering reusable household items, appliances, furniture, sporting goods, electronics and building supplies at affordable prices. THE Phone (734) 222-7880 BS e 2420 S. Industrial Hwy, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 www.recycleannarbor.org E R HOURS: Mon-Sat-a Sun 10-2 C E N T E R Donation pick-up available. Call for details. 4