0 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, October 17, 2008- NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT GM to cut another 1,600 jobs at 3 local factories "Another 1,600 workers at three General Motors Corp. factories willbe laid offindefinitelyoverthe next few months as the company tries to control its inventory amid a worsening U.S. sales slump. About 700 workers at GM's pickup truck plant in Pontiac will be furloughed starting Feb. 1, while another 500 at the Detroit- Hamtramck sedan factory will be laid off starting Jan. 12, spokes- man Chris Lee said yesterday. In addition, 400 workers at a two- seat sports car assembly plant in Wilmington, Del., also will be out of work starting Dec. 8. Workers were notified of the * company's actions Sept. 29, Lee said. The Detroit-Hamtramck plant, which makes the Buick Lucerne and Cadillac DTS full-size sedans, already is down to a single daily shift. GM will reduce its assembly line speed from 56 to 38 cars per hour to achieve the layoffs, Lee said. The Pontiac plant, which makes the Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra pickups, also is operating on one shift and will see its line speed go from 55 trucks to 24 trucks per hour. In Wilmington, the plant that makesthePontiac Solstice,SaturnSky and Opel GT roadsters will go from two shifts per daycto one, Lee said. WASHINGTON Report: Banks borrowed record totals from banks Banks borrowed in record amounts from the Federal Re- serve's emergency lending facility over the past week, while invest- ment banks drew loans at a brisk - though slightly lower - pace, further evidence of the credit stresses hobbling the country. The Fed's report, released yes- terday, showed commercial banks averaged a record $99.7 billion in daily borrowing over the past week. That surpassed the old re- cord - a daily average of $75 bil- lion - from the prior week. On Wednesday alone, $101.9 billion was drawn, an all-time high. For the week ending Wednes- day investment firms drew $131.1 0 billion. That was down a bit from $134 billion in the previous week. This category was broadened last week to include any loans that were made to the U.S. and Lon- don-based broker-dealer subsid- iaries of Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Merrill Lynch. WASHINGTON Report: FBI looking into ACORN's voter registration ties The FBI is investigating wheth- er the community activist group ACORN helped foster voter reg- istration fraud around the nation before the presidential election, a senior law enforcement official confirmed yesterday. A second senior law enforce- ment official says the FBI was looking at results of recent raids on ACORN offices in several states for any evidence of a coordinated national scam. Both officials spoke on condi- tion of anonymity because Justice Department regulations forbid discussing ongoing investigations particularly so close to an election. ACORN, the Association of Com- munity Organizations for Reform Now,saysithasregistered1.3million young people, minorities and poor and working-class voters - most of whom tend tobe Democrats. Republican accusations about the group were raised during Wednesday's presidential debate between Democrat Barack Obama and GOP candidate John McCain. Some ACORN employees have been accused of submitting false voter registration forms - includ- ing some signed 'Mickey Mouse' or other fictitious characters. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 4,183- Number of American service members who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. There were no deaths identified yesterday. Obama continues his push into once-red states Suspected U.S. missile strike kills 6 in Pakistan Democratic getting spanked," he said. Obama won the Iowa caucuses, only to nominee warns lose the New Hampshire primary , to Sen. Hillary Rodham Clin- not to get cocky ton. "We want to make sure that we are closing strong, running WASHINGTON (AP) - Dem- through the tape." ocrat Barack Obama extended An energized McCain told vot- his front-running campaign into ers, "Choose well. There's much at West Virginia, a bastion of white, stake," as he campaigned in Penn- middle-class voters who rejected sylvania, one of a dwindling num- his primary season appeals, and ber of Democratic-leaning states confidently broached the subject the Arizona senator still hopes to of victory ina presidential contest put in the GOP column. playing out on Republican turf. Hitting his likely theme for the GOP rival John McCain found finalweeks, McCain said the Dem- himself looking for a break as he ocrat wants to "spread the wealth was largely forced to defend his around" but that "people are not standing in states President Bush going to let Sen. Obama raise their won four years ago. taxes in a tough economy." And, he "We are now 19 days not from tried anew to make the first-term the end but from the beginning," Illinois senator's resume a liabili- Obama told the crowd at a New ty: "The next president won't have York fundraiser a day after the time to get used to the office. He final presidential debate. He won't have the luxury of studying noted the "extraordinary" work up on the issues before he acts." ahead for the next president. With their face-to-face debates Still, he warned against get- over, both candidates are courting ting "giddy or cocky," reminding an estimated third of voters who supporters with two words: "New are undecided or could still change Hampshire." their minds. Obama is looking to "You know, I've been in these solidify his advantage in polling in positions before where we were key battlegrounds as the political favored and the press starts get- environment and economic crisis ting carried away and we end up favors Democrats. McCain is trying to change the dynamics, but even Republicans acknowledge it's largely out of McCain's hands. "It appears Obama is trying to build a mandate," said Steve Lombardo, a Republican pollster in Washington. "Can McCain do anything to turn it around? Doubtful." "We're going to need some kind of outside game-changing event to really make a difference," said Saul Anuzis, the GOP chairman in Michigan. Nevertheless, McCain is trying to gain ground with automated phone calls in at least two states, Nevada and Wisconsin. The mes- sage: "Barack Obama has worked closely with domestic terrorist Bill Ayers, whose organization bombed the U.S. Capitol, the Pen- tagon, a judge's home and killed Americans." In 1969, Ayers co-founded the Weather Underground, an anti- Vietnam war group that claimed responsibility for bombing gov- ernment buildings. More than 25 years later, Ayers, by then a col- lege professor living in Obama's Chicago neighborhood, hosted a meet-the-candidate session at his home for Obama. At least two extremists believed to be Arab killed in strike, source says By CANDACE RONDEAUX and SHAIQ HUSSAIN The Washington Post KABUL, Afghanistan - A sus- pected U.S. missile strike near the headquarters of a top Taliban lead- er in Pakistan's tribal areas yester- day killed six people and injured five others, according to Pakistani intelligence officials and residents. The attack occurred late yester- day morning, said Ikramullah Meh- sud, a resident, when an unmanned U.S. Predator drone fired several missiles on two homes in the town of Ladha in the tribal area of South Waziristan. A Pakistani intelligence official who spoke on condition of anonym- ity said the bombardment killed at least two extremist commanders who are believed to be of Arab ori- gin. "The others killed were most likely local militants, but we don't have any information about the owners of the two houses that were bombed," the intelligence official said. In the wake of faltering Paki- stani efforts to control the flow of insurgents across the border into Afghanistan, U.S. missile attacks on Islamist insurgents sheltering in the rugged mountainous tribal areas of Pakistan have become more frequent this year. There have been 12 such attacks on Pakistan's tribal areas since August. Most of the recent missile strikes have occurred in the tribal areas of South and North Waziristan, which are believed to be the main operational bases-fortop al-Qaeda leaders. But Thursday's attack in South Waziristan was notable because it marked the first aerial assault in more than a year on a well-known redoubt of Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud, according to another Pakistani intelligence offi- cial. The official said there was no indication that Mehsud was nearby when the attack occurred, but resi- dents told authorities that several Arab men believed tobe allied with the Taliban had been seen in the area of the attack recently. U.S. intelligence officials have named Mehsud as the mastermind behind the Dec. 27 suicide bomb attack that killed former Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto. Mehsud has denied responsibility for her death. With an estimated 25,000 Islamist insurgents united under his command, Mehsud is, nonetheless, considered by many military and intelligence experts to be one of Pakistan's most powerful Taliban commanders. Concerns about the spread of the Taliban insurgency inside Pakistan reached new heights last month after a spectacular suicide bomb attack on a Marriott Hotel in Islam- abad killed more than 50 people and injured about 250. Rising secu- rity concerns have been a topic of debate among Pakistani lawmakers who met this week in a closed-door session to discuss a recent military briefing about insurgent activity in the country. In recent months, Pakistan has evolved into the new frontline in the U.S.-led war on Islamist insur- gents in the region. On Wednesday, top U.S., Pakistani and Afghan military officials met in Islamabad to discuss cooperative efforts to combat insurgents on both sides of the 1,500 mile border between Pakistan and Afghanistan. It was the second time in recent months that the top NATO com- mander, Gen. David D. McKier- nan, has met in Islamabad with the Pakistani army chief, Gen. Ashfaq Kayani, and the Afghan army chief, Gen. Bismullah Khan. McKiernan, in a written state- ment released Thursday, said Pakistan, Afghanistan and NATO must work together to close gaps in military efforts to crush the insurgency. "We most close those seams and work together to give the insurgents no place to hide," McKiernan said. Hussain reported from Islam- abad, Pakistan. In another wild day, Dow ends up 401 Nothing surprising investors in one of the most volatile markets in history NEW YORK (AP) - A stock market as difficult to fathom as it is volatile pulled off another stun- ning U-turn yesterday,.transform- ing a 380-point loss for the Dow Jones industrials into a 401-point gain. Was it the government's bailout beginning to have an effect? The credit markets finally beginning to loosen up? Investors looking for a bottom in stocks? Wall Street seemed sure of this much: The whipsawing will con- tinue. So buckle up. "You're notgoingtosee50-point ranges, you're going to see two- three-four hundred point ranges," said Woody Dorsey, president of Market Semiotics, a financial fore- casting firm in Castleton, Vt. At any other time in the history of the stock markets, a day like yes- terday would be enough to draw a double take. But in these extraor- dinary times, it was the second- calmest day of the week. The Dow set a record on Mon- day with a 936-point gain. After a 77-point loss on Tuesday, a rela- tive breather, sellers stampeded on Wednesday and drove the Dow back down 733. On Thursday, heavy selling in the morning took the Dow close to 8,200, butstocks rallied into the lunch hour and picked up steam in the afternoon. The average fin- ished at 8,979.26. The gain of 401 points marked the 21st trading session out of the past 24 in which the Dow has finished with a triple-digit gain or loss, an unprecedented run of volatility. Thanks to a massive cash infu- sion by European central banks and the U.S. Treasury, interest rates on overnight, one-week and two-week debt began to shrink, and lending loosened up just a bit. 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