The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, October 27, 2008 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS ANCHORAGE, Alaska Major paper in Palin's home state endorses Obama The Anchorage Daily News, Alaska's largest newspaper, has endorsed Sen. Barack Obama for president. The newspaper said yesterday the Democrat "brings far more promise to the office. In a time of grave economic crisis, he displays thoughtful analysis, enlists wise counsel and operates with a cool, steady hand." The Daily News said since the economic crisis has emerged, Republican presidential candidate John McCain has "stumbled and fumbled badly" in dealing with it. DAMASCUS, Syria Witnesses say U.S. military has attacked Syria Syria's state-run television and witnesses say U.S. military heli- copters have attacked an area along the country's border with Iraq, causing casualties. The report quoted unnamed Syrian officials and said the area is near the Syrian border town of Abu Kamal. It gave no other details on Sunday's attack. Local residents told The Asso- ciated Press by telephone that two helicopters carrying U.S. soldiers raided the village of Hwijeh, 10 miles inside Syria's border, killing seven people and wounding five. WASHINGTON Candidates campaign hard in last week Republican JohnMcCain de- clared "I'm going to win it," dis- missing polls showing him behind with little more than a week to go in the presidential race. Democrat Barack Obama rolled out a new TV ad asserting his rival is "out of ideas, out of touch, and running out of time." Heading into the final nine days oT the~'2008 contesf;~ifi"~Whiite~ House competitors campaigned in key battlegrounds that Presi- dent Bush won four years ago as the state-by-state Electoral Col- lege map tilts strongly in Obama's favor. Democrats and Republicans alike say it will be extraordinarily difficult for McCain to change the trajectory of the canmpaign before the Nov. 4 election. "Unfortunately, I think John McCain might be added to that long list of Arizonans who ran for president but were never elected," McCain's fellow senator from Ari- zona, Republican Jon Kyl, told the Arizona Daily Star editorial board in an interview published Sunday. WASHINGTON U.S. experiencing nuclear decline The mighty U.S. arsenal of nu- clear weapons, midwived by World War II and nurtured by the Cold War, is declining in power and purpose while the military's com- petence in handling the world's most dangerous arms has eroded. At the same time, international ef- forts to contain the spread of such weapons look ineffective. DefenseSecretaryRobertGates, for one, wants the next president 0 to think about what nuclear mid- dle-age and decline means for na- tional security. Gates joins a growing debate about the reliability and future credibility of the American arse- nal with his first extensive speech on nuclear arms Tuesday. The de- bate is attracting increasing atten- tion inside the Pentagon even as the military is preoccupied with fighting insurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan. The unconventional tools of war there include co- vert commandos, but not nuclear weapons. - Compiled from Daily wire reports i .m4,186 Number of American service members who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. There were no deaths identified yesterday. OFFICE From Page1A "We had to tell people 'You can schlep down to Main or come to our Thursday meetings,' but this is an office that is open 16 hours a day, that's a lot more accessible," she said. "We're beinga lot more effec- tive in the area because of this." About 20 students came to the opening. "Itwasobviouslyalittlelastmin- ute," Miars said. "It was kinda cool. I've never been handed a building and told. 'you can do whatever you want with this."' College Democrats Chair Nathaniel Eli Coats Styer, a Public Policy junior, said it was the cam- paign field organizer assigned to coordinating with the College Dem- ocrats, Brian Straw, who asked the campaign to open the office within a few blocks of Central Campus. "It's only because of everything we've been doing on campus that the campaign was willing to give us this office to amplify those efforts," Straw told a group of student vol- unteers yesterday. The College Democrats have held multiple registration drives and canvassing efforts for their candidate. Between the start of the school year and the Oct. 6 registra- tion deadline, they registered more than 4,000 voters. Straw said the next step is get- ting those people they registered to show up at the polls next week. The office was leased by the Obama campaign for two weeks at a cost of about $1,000, Styer said. Obama campaign officials were not available for comment. When the College Democrat vol- unteers got to the new storefront RODRIGUEZ From Page 1A Friday, though,theyhad theirwork cut out for them. "This place was a dump," Styer said of the former jewelry store. "It was basicallytrashed." Cronyn said when they first arrived atthe buildingthere was no lighting, the walls were covered in Brillo pads and pennies, there were rust stains on the floors and walls and glass shards scattered around. "It was a very bizarre space to step into it," she said. "I guess you can't be too picky when you're try- ing to rent an office for 13 days." Tenpeople worked whilelistening to Bruce Springsteen for about eight to 10 hours Friday to clean, organize and decorate the space, Styer said. Three coats of primer later, a five-foot diameter Obama cam- paign logo was painted on one of the walls. On the adjacent wall, a makeshift calendar made of tape and spanning about 10 feet. That calendar, which has space for each of the final nine days lead- ing up to Nov. 4, will serve to coor- dinate the group's canvassing and Get Out the Vote efforts. Students will be able to come in and make phone calls for Obama, even if they only have 15 minutes, she said. Volunteers can stop in and pick up a canvassing packet with a list of registered voters if they have even a three-hour break between classes to knock on doors. At the opening of the office, State Sen. Liz Brater (D - Ann Arbor) praised the College Demo- crats' efforts to turn out voters near campus and encouraged them to continue. "U of M and Ann Arbor have always been ground zero for tak- ing the state of Michigan for Dem- ocrats," Brater said. "I don't want anybody to be lulled by the polls." is similar to Rodriguez's terms with former employer West Vir- ginia University, which demanded MSU game yields 111 police incidents Police contact was most since 1997 Ohio State game By LISA HAIDOSTIAN Daily News Editor Police made contact with 111 people at Saturday's football game, the highest number on a game day since the 1997 game against Ohio State, when there were 138. FELDMAN From Page 1A worst in at least 41, the Spartans should have beaten Michigan. More important, their coach, Mark Dantonio, had to defeat the Wolverines. This game meant more to Dantonio than it did to anybody. He came to East Lansing two years ago as a disciplined leader who would establish a foundation for the program. He circled the Michigan game as the stage to show the Spartans weren't the same old Michigan State. But two days after his team blew a 10-point lead with seven minutes leftlast season in a very Spartan manner - a phrase Dan- tonio used to describe his team's effort Saturday - he sat in front of a group of reporters and went off the deep end. Michigan and Mike Hart's "little brother" remarks had clearly gotten to him. He jabbed at Hart's height, said the Wolverines "need to check them- selves sometimes"rand uttered the most-repeated phrase of his meltdown: "Pride comes before the fall," Dantonio said. That wasn't what happened Sat- Of the 111 run-ins, 13 resulted in arrests. Police arrested eight people for minor in possession of alcohol, two for domestic violence, one for assaulting a police officer, one for retail fraud - a person was charged with stealing merchan- dise from an MDen store - and one for resisting and obstructing a police officer. The rest of the sub- jects were either cited or ejected from the game. In an e-mail, University Police spokeswoman Diane Brown said the high volume of police contact urday, and Dantonio knows it. "This was not the fall of Michi- gan football," Dantonio said. "That's not what this is about. Michigan has a good football team. They're a very well-coached football team. They play with toughness and have a greattradi- tion. What this was about was Spartan pride." The game won't have a tre- mendous effect on the Wolverine program, not like it could for the Spartans, for whom Dantonio said, "This one counts a little more than one." For the fourth week in a row, a lengthy winning streak was snapped. Six straight against Illinois, 24 against teams in the Mid-American Conference, nine straight Penn State and now six against Michigan State - all ended. This loss might hurt a little more because it's a rivalry game, but by this point, every- body realizes this is a rebuilding year. But Dantonio needed this. How could he justify his message if he was 0-2 against Michigan? Instead, Dantonio became just the fourth of the Spartans' 24 football coaches to beat Michigan in one of his first two tries. He now has the credibility to challenge the Wol- verines for in-state recruits. was "mostly due to the late after- noon game, which led to heavy alcohol abuse, and an intense rivalry with a large number of MSU fans in attendance." Brown said the department adds a few more patrols for rivalry games. She also said that because officers were busy, some law- breakers might have been eject- ed or given a citation instead of arrested. "Some people might have gotten off a little easier than they normal- ly would have," she said. "I guess I can look in their eyes and say, 'It could happen for you,'" Dantonio said. Shortly after yells of "Go Green! Go White!" overtook Michigan Stadium, Dantonio walked into the Spartan locker room with the the Paul Bunyan Trophy tucked under his right arm. But how secure is his grip? Con- trol of the rivalry is in limbo right now, but both players think their team has it. "(Offensive coordinator Don) Treadwell talked about it before the game," Hoyer said. "We need- to make a change. We need to make a change in this rivalry. We need to makea change in this state. I think the state is probably a little more green than it was yesterday." Said Graham: "They've got a lot to prove to Michigan. They've got a couple more games to win to start talking." And they both could be right. Michigan State has today, and there's no denyingthat. But the Spartans don't have control. Neither does Michigan, though. The rivalry is up for grabs, and at this point, that's a credit to Dantonio. - Dan Feldman can be reached at danfeld@umich.edu. that the coach pay $4 million to ly higher than Indiana's Terry cancel his contract and leave for Hoeppner, though, who earned Michigan. After a long legal battle, $600,000 in non-performance Rodriguez and the University of based compensation in 2007. Michigan decided to pay the buy- Rodriguez's contract includes out. Rodriguez paid $L5 million of an initial $4 million buyout clause the buyout and the University of if Rodriguez prematurely termi- Michigan paid the remaining $2.5 nates the agreement. The letter million. of intent specified that the buyout University Athletic Director would decrease by $500,000 ayear, Bill Martin said in a statement at but the contract does not decrease the time, "Rich and the rest of us the buyout amountuntil 2011. felt that it would be best to get this The contract's buyout clause distracting issue behind us." NW-,,m A A