The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com N ewsiWednesday, October 29, 2008 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS BELL.S, Tens, Authorities say skinhead plot wasn't fully formed Two white supremacists charged with plotting to behead blacks across the country and assassinate Barack Obama while wegring white top hats and tuxes were likely too disorganized to carry out the plot, authorities said, and their planning was riddled with blunders. Paul Schlesselman, 18, of Hele- na-West Helena, Ark., and Daniel Cowart, 20, of Bells are accused of dreaming up the plan. While authorities say they had guns capable of creating carnage, docu- ments show they never got close to getting off the ground. Amongethe blunders: They drew attention to themselves by etching swastikas on a car with sidewalk chalk, only knew each other for a month, couldn't even pull off a house robbery, and a friend ratted them out to authorities. ATLANTA Georgia residents wait up to 8 hours to vote early Georgia residents packed poll- ing places as early voting started in earnest this week, braving lines as long as eight hours to cast bal- lots and forcing some voting sites to stay open deep into the night. Polls have been open in Georgia since Sept. 22, but dozens more opened this week as part of a state- wide strategy to ease the crunch on Election Day. The advance vot- ing sites will be open every day through Friday. The new system has been popu- lar: About 200,000 voters cast their ballots on Monday alone. They're among 1.2 million people, more than 20 percent of the state's 5.6 million registered voters, who have voted early so far. The votes won't be counted until Election Day. In Florida, a crucial battle- ground state where early voting lines have also been long, Gov. Charlie Crist signed an executive order Tuesday keeping polling places open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., fourhours longer than specified in state law. He cited record turnout in signing the order, which also requires polling places to be open a total of 12 hours this weekend instead of eight. COLUMBUS, Ohio Joe the Plumber endorses McCain, chides Obama Job the Plumber endorsed Re- publican John McCain for presi- dent yesterday. Samuel J. Wurzelbacher gained national attentionwhen Obama told him during a campaign stop that he wanted to "spread the wealth around." Their exchange about Obama's tax plan aired countless times'on cable news programs, and McCain repeatedly cited Joe the Plumber in their third and final de- bateand again at campaign events. McCain points to Wurzelbacher as an example of the middle-class worker who would be hurt economi- calIry an Obama presidency, How- ever;Wurzelbacher likely would fare better under Obama's tax plan be- caus4 it calls for no tax increase for wontng couples earning less than $240,b00 a year - Wurzelbacher hin~lfearnsfarless - andprovides for imiddle-class tax cut. i4a McCain rally at a flag store, Wsirielbacher said he feared that Ob t4a would turn the U.S. into a socialist nation. TRAVRSE CITY, Mich. Court to allow suit a inst Meijer T Michigan Supreme Court is allowing officials in Grand Tra- vee County's Acme Township to sue retail giant Meijer Inc. h court issued an order on Monday upholding a ruling by Cir- cuitjudge Philip Rodgers that the suiitould go forward. * Wnning commissioner Robert Carstens accuses Meijer of harass- in m with a frivolous lawsuit ani Ilegal campaign activity. Thy dispute involved the Grand Rapi s company's plan to build a superstore in the township, which has (Ovided local residents. several other local officials say theyay join Carstens in suing Mei- jer. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Political T-shirts, buttons banned at Mich. polling places DISCUSSING SOCIAL IDENTITIES Judge's ruling upholds 1950 law LANSING (AP) - A federal judge has upheld Michigan's ban on campaign T-shirts and buttons inside polling places. U.S. District Judge Patrick Duggan ruled yesterday in the lawsuit brought this month by Council 25 of the American Fed- eration of State, County and Municipal Employees against Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land and state elections director Chris Thomas. AFSCME attorney Herbert Sanders argued Monday that the ban oppresses voters' right to freedom of expression and abridges their right to vote free from intimidation. But the state argued the law has been on the books since the 1950s and was amended in the early 1970s to prevent intimida- tion and preserve the sanctuary of the voting place. "This was never an effort to squash enthusiasm, but to pre- serve the sanctity of the polling places on Election Day," sec- retary of state spokeswoman Kelly Chesney said Tuesday. "We want voters to be able to cast their ballots without being bombarded with messages and without feeling pressured or intimidated." She says voters are asked only to remove their buttons and to cover up their T-shirts or. turn them inside out before entering the polling place. State law requires candidates and campaign material be kept at least 100 feet from any entrance to a polling place. A message seeking comment was left Tuesday evening at AFSCME Council 25 headquar- ters in Lansing. Automakers seeking government aid beyond bailout and loans Congress has already approved $25 billion in loans WASHINGTON (AP) - Belea- guered U.S. automakers are seeking federal help beyond the money available for them as part of a financial industry bailout and a loan package to fund more fuel- efficient cars, the White House said Tuesday. White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said the auto indus- try has talked to the Bush admin- istration about funding on a much broader scale than the two pro- grams approved by Congress ear- lier this fall. "No doubt that the automak- ers are big important companies, important to a lot of families and important to a lot of regions in this country," Perino said. "We are capable of competing at a level where these companies can suc- ceed, they might just need a little help. And that's what Congress asked us to help provide them." General Motors Corp., which is in talks about acquiring Chrysler LLC, is pursuing $5 billion to $10 billion in government aid, said an industry official, who declined to be identified because the discus- sions were private. GM officials declined comment. GM has approached members of Congress and the admin- istration about a number of ways that government funding could be used to help the com- pany, including playing a part in a Chrysler deal, said a person briefed on the negotiations. The person asked not to be identi- fied because no deal has been completed. Therequests have come as General Motors and Chrysler LLC are burning up cash because of an auto industry sales meltdown due to the U.S. economic downturn. Perino said the "decisions about their futures - and poten- tial mergers - will be decided by them." Yet industry analysts say gov- ernment funding might be neces- sary to seal a deal because of the difficult economic conditions and frozen credit markets. The Bush administration and Congress would have an inter- est in the automakers' survival because of the magnitude of the pension obligations it would face in a bankruptcy and the potential for massive job losses.. Chrysler employs about 49,000 in the U.S. and has about 125,000 pensioners. GM has 177,000 U.S. workers and around 500,000 people receiving pensions. The Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Mich., estimates that for each auto man- ufacturing position, there are 7.5 jobs with parts makers and other companies, meaningthe industry accounts for millions of jobs. Any role by the government in a GM-Chrysler deal would face scrutiny from Congress because it would likely lead to significant job losses as the companies com- bine operations. The WhiteHouse is focused on two major options to aid the industry, Perino said. They include the $25 billion in govern- ment loans approved by Congress for fuel-saving technology and money to free up credit through the $700 billion Wall Street bail- out. Perino said the White House is trying to help automakers access part of the $25 billion. GM has been seeking about $5 billion from the program. Both Barack Obama and John McCain, along with Michigan lawmakers, have urged the Bush administration to expedite the money after estimates that it could take six to 18 months to fund the loans. While the government wran- gling continues, all three U.S.- based automakers are having cash troubles, with Chrysler and GM considered by indus- try analysts to be in the worst shape. Lisa Disch, a professor of political science and women's studies, and Maria Cotera, an assistant professor of Latina American studies and women's studies, speak at a forum titled "Social Identities and the Election" in the Michigan League last night. Former.Detroit mayor begnsjail sentence Kilpatrick shares an typically 20 days in this case. "When someone gets 120 days emotional goodbye in jail, they should get 120 days in jail," Groner said. with family Kilpatrick was taken across the street to the county jail. He traded DETROIT (AP) - Kwame Kil- his custom suit for green clothes patrick, who bid adieu to a prom- and was placed in a private cell ising career as Detroit mayor due where he will spend 23 hours a day. partly to a torrid affair with an ex- As he was being taken from the top aide, was unable to kiss good- courtroom, Kilpatrick yelled out to bye the one woman who stood supporters: "You all take it easy." beside him throughout a sex-and- They responded: "Be strong, text scandal: his wife. mayor. We love you, mayor. We As Kilpatrick was being led off gotyour back,.mayor." by courtroom deputies to begin Kilpatrick, a Democrat, admit- serving the first of 120 days in ted lying while testifying last year jail, he was stopped just short of in a civil lawsuit filed by former embracing Carlita Kilpatrick. police officers who had accused "I can hand her keys, but I can't him of illegally demoting or firing kiss her?" Kilpatrick asked. them. The two spoke briefly before he He and chief of staff Christine was ushered through a rear court- Beatty,.both 38, denied having an room door following yesterday's affair, but text messages obtained sentencing in Wayne County Cir- by a lawyer in the case - and later cuit Court. the Detroit Free Press - clearly Only minutes earlier Judge contradicted them. David Groner called Kilpatrick They used their city pagers to "arrogant and defiant" and ques- arrange trysts and share sexu- tioned the sincerity of a guilty plea ally explicit desires. A fresh batch thatended his career at City Hall. of messages was released by the Kilpatrick declined to speak in prosecutor last week, revealing court, instead relying on lawyers that Kilpatrick, married with to urge the judge to look at his three children, likely had other entire career, not just the crimes lovers. that threw local government into The sentencing wasKilpatrick's disarray for months. first public forum since a speech to The punishment was part of a supporters after he pleaded guilty plea agreement worked out last to obstruction of justice on Sept. month by prosecutors and the 4. In that address, he lashed out at defense. Wayne County Circuit Gov. Jennifer Granholm, who was Judge David Groner followed that holding hearings to remove him deal but said Kilpatrick would not from office, and told Detroit, "you get time off for good behavior, done set me up for a comeback." IMF will need more cash for its bailout Int'l Monetary Fund could seek emergency aid soon LONDON (AP) _ With Iceland, Pakistan, Hungary and Ukraine already clamoring for mountains of cash aid, the $250 billion set aside by the International Mon- etary Fund to help struggling nationsthrough the economic cri- sis is beginning to look puny. China and oil-rich Persian Gulf states should fund the bulk of a major boost in the IMF's bailout pot, Gordon Brown, the British prime minister who has burnished his reputation by taking the lead on the financial meltdown, said Tuesday. Those countries have the largest currency reserves and therefore should do the most, Brown said, without specifying how much more money should be added to the fund for helping nations whose banking systems and currencies are being bat- tered. "We must act now. We must set up the fund as quickly as possi- ble," Brown told reporters before heading to Paris for further talks on the crisis with French Presi- dent Nicolas Sarkozy. "I believe it is possible in a very short period of time to create an international fund that is strong enough to withstand these dif- ficulties," Brown said. "It is in every nation's interest and in the interests of hard working families in our country and every country that financial contagion does not spread." Chinese institutions held relatively little of the toxic sub- prime mortgage debt hobbling Western institutions and were thus largely unscathed by the collapse of the U.S. housing market. But as a major export- er it is exposed to slumping demand for its products abroad if the debt crisis causes a deep global recession. There was no immediate com- ment from the Chinese govern- ment, which has reported foreign currency reserves totaling $1.9 trillion as of the end of Septem- ber. currencies plunging. Tight credit Speaking in Berlin, Bahrain's from strapped banks and lending King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa markets mean it is difficult for didn't directly address Brown's them to get financing on their call for the Persian Gulf to help own. but said the region was open to Those troubles insmaller coun- talks. "We would like to play a tries could hit economies in richer part in (working on) an interna- countries that trade with them or tional financial system, a new sys- whose banks do business there. tem," he said. One analyst said Beijing could Brown's office said he would demand a bigger role in interna- discuss how much money he tional institutions in return for believes should be pledged to the helping. IMF fund during talks Nov. 15 "First thing that has to hap- with world leaders in Washington. pen is that they have be seri- He and others, including Sarkozy, ously engaged in the dialogue," have called for discussion of a said Jeremy Batstone-Carr, new world financial architecture head of research at the Charles relying on global bodies like the Stanley investment firm in Lon- IMF. ' don. "If you want their money, The IMF's executive board you have to give them a seat at is expected to soon consider the top table and let them have streamlining its emergency loan their say." programs ahead of a stream of Brown won plaudits after the petitions that analysts fear will be British government took large coming in from emerging econo- stakes in foundering banks, an mies needing support. approach quickly adopted by It already agreed to lend Ice- the U.S. and other European land $2.1 billion and Ukraine governments. That burnished $16.5 billion, and is in talks with his standing abroad - although Hungary for an estimated $10 at home his Labour Party still billion to $12.5 billion in loans. trails the Conservative opposi- Pakistan said Tuesday it would tion in polls. ask for an IMF bailout within Brown, who headed the IMF's two weeks if it cannot secure 24-member policy advisory com- $5 billion in funding from other mittee while he was head of the sources. British Treasury for 10 years Brown said he planned to hold before he became prime minister telephone talks with Chinese i1 mid-2007, has taken the lead Premier Wen Jiabao this week partly because he wants to main- and would go to the Persian Gulf tain London's position as a major region Saturday to discuss the financial hub. crisis. Stephen Lewis, chief economist It will be "the countries that at Monument Securities in London, have got substantial reserves - said it is a vital national interest the oil rich countries and others "that this position, and the tax rev- - who are going to be the biggest enues that flow fromit, be preserved contributors to this fund," Brown or enhanced in any new monetary said. arrangements that emerge from the "China also has very substan- forthcoming discussions." tial reserves. There are a number However, Lewis said it is "prob- of countries that actually can do ably premature" for policymakers to quite a lot in the immediate future be trying to make decisions on a new to make sure that the interna- international financial architecture tional community has sufficient when it is "not yet clear how much resources to support countries more of the old edifice will collapse." that get themselves into difficul- There is widespread skepti- ties," he said. cism much can be accomplished With world stock markets at the November meeting in down steeply, many investors Washington, given next week's have been withdrawing money U.S. elections that will make from smaller countries' emerg- President Bush even more of a ing markets, which has sent their lame duck. p4A H,-- #