The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, November 212008 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON Congress rushes to extend jobless benefits Jarred by new jobless alarms, Congress raced to approve legisla- tion yesterday to keep unemploy- ment checks flowing through the December holidays and into the new year for a million or more laid- off Americans whose benefits are running out. The economic picture was only getting worse, if Wall Street was any indication. The Dow Jones industrials dropped more than 400 points for a second straight day, reaching the lowest level in more than five years, and the Standard & Poor's 500 index fell below lows established six years ago. The Senate'svote followed yester- day's governmentreport thatlaid-off workers' new claims for jobless aid had reached a 16-year high and the number of Americans searching for work had surged past10 million. The White House, which had opposed broader legislation con- taining the benefits extension, urged passage of the new version and said President George W. Bush would quickly sign it. WASHINGTON Gates likely to stay as Pentagon chief What Robert Gates once called "inconceivable to me" - his re- maining as defense secretary be- yond Inauguration Day - is look- ing a bit more conceivable to the rest of Washington. The 65-year-old former spy- master has turned publicly mum on the circumstances under which he would stay, even briefly, after President-elect Barack Obama takes office. But one of the leading scenarios for a wartime transition at the Pentagon has Gates holding the fort, at least for some months. If Gates does stay on, the an- nouncement could come soon. Anationalsecurityspokeswoman for Obama, Brooke Anderson, said yesterday she had no comment on Gates or on whether the president- elect has held discussions with any candidate for the Pentagon job. BAGHDAD Iraqis fight over US * security agreement Iraq's parliament persevered yesterday in its debate on a pro- posed security agreement with the United States despite raucous attempts by opposition lawmakers to disrupt proceedings ahead of next week's vote on the deal. The measure, which would keep U.S. forces in Iraq for another three years, has a good chance of pass- ing in the Shiite-led parliament. But the uproar created by loyalists of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al- Sadr suggests the pact could remain divisive as the country struggles for reconciliation after years of war. If al-Sadr's group and other leg- islators opposed to the pact lose by a thin margin in the vote planned for Monday, they might attempt to turn their anti-American message into a defining issue in provincial elections on Jan. 31 and general elections late in 2009. His followers planned a major rally today in cen- tral Baghdad to protest the security deal, which they view as a surren- der to U.S. interests. SAN FRANCISCO * San Francisco to install electric car recharging stations A $1 billion network of electric car recharging stations will dot San Francisco Bay area highways under a plan unveiled yesterday that aims to greatly expand the number of electric vehicles on the road. Palo Alto-based Better Place along with San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums and San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed announced the deal to install charging stations in homes, businesses, parkinglots and govern- ment buildings by 2012. The company said it will also build mechanized battery swap- ping centers where robots will remove and replace the batteries in cars that are compatible with the system. These stations will allow electric car drivers to travel longer distances without recharging. The initiative would make the Bay Area the first region in the U.S. to create an electric car network. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Stocks plummet for second straight day Gitmo detainees freed after order Late sell-off ignited by fading hopes of Big Three bailout NEW YORK (AP) - Stocks plunged for a second straight day yesterday, falling to levels not seen in at least five years, as financial and energy stocks tum- bled while demand for the safety of government debt spiked. Wall Street saw the most intense selling late in the session after hopes faded that lawmak- ers would quickly assemble an aid package for U.S. automakers, and as the Standard & Poor's 500 index broke through lows estab- lished in 2002. That breach of a key technical threshold sent a shudder through the market and touched off further selling. The S&P 500 index fell 6.7 percent to its lowest close since April 1997. The Dow Jones indus- trial average, meanwhile, fell 445 points, or 5.6 percent, to its low- est close since March 2003. The decline brings the Dow's two-day drop to 873 points, or 10.6 per- cent, its worst two-day percent- age loss since October 1987. Financial stocks plunged on worries that the government's financialrescue won't be sufficient to cover banks' losses. Meanwhile, a sharp drop in oil prices weighed heavily on energy companies. Yesterday's pullback came amid heavy volume, a welcome sign for some investors who are looking for the market to experience a cathartic sell-off that could lay the ground- work for a recovery. Heavier vol- ume can signal investors are scared enough to sell rather than simply sit Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange yesterday. The market fell nearly 450 points, capping atwo-day drop of more than 870 points. WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal judge yesterday ordered the release of five Algerians held at Guantan- amo Bay, Cuba, and the continued detention of a sixth in a major blow to the Bush administration's strat- egy to keep terror suspects locked up without charges. In the first case of its kind, U.S. District Judge Richard J. Leon said the government's evi- dence linking the five Algerians to al-Qaida was not credible as it came from a single, unidentified source. Therefore, he said, the five could not be held indefinitely as enemy combatants, and should be BASKETBALL From Page 1 Harris and Sims led the way offensively, taking advantage of their open shots and pushing the pacetokeepUCLAonitsheels. Sims had 18 points, and Harris had 15. But the Bruins didn't go anywhere. Despite the Wolverines' improved play, they never led by more than four points. In the first four minutes of the game, UCLA looked primed to run away from with the game, taking a 9-1 lead. Michigan Coach John Beilein called a timeout to calmhis team, and the Wolverines respond- ed with a 6-0 run. The Wolverines kept the game close early with their 1-3-1 zone that led to17 Bruin turnovers. "You don't know how teams are going to react sometimes," Beilein said. "They missed some shots ... and we created some turnovers." UCLA and Michigan traded blows throughoutthe first half, but Michigan refused to go away. "You can't let a deficit get in the way," Beileinsaid. "Butyoucan'talso be in a situation where you play very well and let that get inthe way. That's been a theme of ours all along, just to be tougher mentally and physically." With two minutes left in the first half, the Bruins appeared to pull away again, taking a 29-19 lead with a 9-0 run. But Sims respond- ed with two straight baskets in released immediately. "To allow enemy combatancy to rest on so thin a reed would be inconsistent with this court's obli- gation," Leon told the crowded courtroom. As a result, he said, "the court must and will grant their petitions and order their release." As for the sixth Algerian, Belkacem Bensayah, Leon said there was enough reason to believe he was close to an al-Qaida opera- tive and had sought to help others travel to Afghanistan to join the terrorists' fight against the United States and its allies. the paint, including an electrfy- ing dunk off a pass from fifth-year senior guard C.J. Lee. Michigantrailedby six atthe half. Everything that didn't go the Wolverines' way in the first stanza, seemed to in the second. The Wolverines opened the frame with a 10-2 run, taking their first lead of the night. Douglass began the half with back-to-back baskets, and Harris followed with two of his own. With 4:58 left, UCLA forward Alfred Aboya hit a basket to give the Bruins their first lead in more 12 minutes. But Douglass, with maturity beyond his freshman year, nailed a 3-pointer at the top of the arc to give Michigan a 49-48 lead. "I think that's why we won the game," Harris said. "Big shots by Stuart Douglass." A few possessions later, Har- ris picked off an errant pass and pushed it up the court, leading to a Simslayup. Just moments after that, Sims sealed the Wolverines' win with his dunk. As Michigan celebrated in the locker room, Beilein told his team to enjoy the win, butonly for one night. Michigan advances to play Duke tonight in the championship game of the 2K Sports College Hoops Classic. "Handling success is sometimes more difficultthan handling defeat," Beilein said. "We have to handle the success and be ready for (Duke)." on the sidelines, which can result in relativelylightvolume. Observers said the selling high- lighted the entrenched pessimism about the prospects for the econ- omy. "Unrelenting gloom has taken over the markets,"said Dana John- son, chief economist at Comerica Inc. "The economic news, the con- cerns about some major financial institutions, the concerns about the auto sector, earnings reports, everything is coming out in away that is just provoking a massive selling in the stock market." "Back in October we were look- ing at a potential catastrophic melt- downofthecreditmarkets,and that didn't happen," he said. "But that doesn't mean tremendous damage hasn't been doneto the economy." Those worries about the econ- omy sent the Dow down 444.99, or 5.56 percent, to 7,552.29. It was the biggest percentage drop for the blue chips since Oct. 22 and the Dow's lowest close since March 12, 2003. Broader stock indicators also showed huge declines. The Stan- dard & Poor's 500 index fell 54.14, or 6.71 percent, to 752.44, below the closing low of 776.76 logged on Oct. 9, 2002, to its lowest close since April 14,1997. World leaders debate how to deal with piracy surge in Somali waters Pirates attack cargo ships with food for 3.2 million Somalis NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - The U.N., African Union and Arab nations struggled to respond yes- terday to a surge of pirate attacks, authorizing sanctions and calling for international peacekeepers to address the chaos in Somalia that has spawned an upsurge in sea banditry. The economic reverbera- tions of the attacks widened as the world's largest container- shipping company said it would begin sending some slower ves- sels thousands of miles around southern Africa to avoid the perilous waters on the shorter Suez Canal route. Insurance underwriters and brokers said the increased danger off the east coast of Africa was driv- ing up premiums for shipping operators. The African Union urged the United Nations to quickly send peacekeepers to Somalia but that appeared unlikely any- time soon. A U.N. peacekeep- ing operation in the early 1990s saw the downing of two U.S. Army helicopters and killing of 18 American soldiers. The U.S. withdrew and U.N. peacekeep- ers were gone by 1995. In New York, the U.N. Secu- rity Council voted unanimously to authorize its sanctions com- mittee to recommend people and entities that would be sub- ject to an asset freeze and travel ban for engaging in or support- ing acts that threaten peace in Somalia, for violating a U.N. arms embargo, and for obstructing delivery of humanitarian aid. Pirates have attacked a number of cargo ships with food and other items for some 3.2 million needy Somalis. But it was unclear how that could affect the pirates, who live off cash ransoms dropped in burlap sacks from helicopters or in waterproof suitcases loaded onto skiffs. Frightened about a drop in rev- enue from ship traffic through the Suez Canal, Egypt hosted a meeting of seven Arab nations including Saudi Arabia, which saw pirates seize a supertanker loaded with $100 million worth of crude in the Indian Ocean on Saturday. The meeting ended with the group recommending the estab- lishment of committees that would meet in Yemen early next year to develop concrete steps to combat piracy, participants said. Um Car Repair S * Co'vpetitwVe Prices * "Fpe TVx bado to oa M us * Ed wlg owwed - 30 ars Professional Rutomotiue ProAutoTechs.com P. 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