The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cam Wednesday, December 3, 2008 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, December 3, 2008 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS NEW YORK Nov. auto sales worst since 1982 U.S. auto sales plunged 37 per- cent in November to their worst level in more than 26 years, dash- ing expectations that this dismal year for vehicle demand had found a bottom, and adding more ammu- nition to the Detroit automakers' case for a congressional lifeline. "Our industry is in a much more severe situation than the rest of the economy," said Mike DiGio- vanni, General Motors Corp.'s executive director of global mar- ket and industry analysis. "We cannot continue at these levels or else the entire industry is going to go down." U.S. autosales inNovemberfellto 746,789,accordingto AutodataCorp. On aseasonally adjusted basis, auto- makers reported an annual sales rate of 10.2 million units, the lowest levelsince October 1982. Automakers and analysts blamed the crumbling economy, less access to vehicle financ- ing, and a wait-and-see approach among consumers more preoccu- pied with the value of their homes and the fate of their jobs than the lure of a new car. ATLANTA Chambliss wins runoff in Georgia Georgia Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss handed the GOP a firewall against Democrats eager to flex their newfound political muscle in Washington, winning a bruising runoff battle yesterday that had captured the national limelight. Chambliss' victory thwarted Democrats' hopes of winning a 60 seat filibuster-proof majority in the Senate. It came after a bitter monthlong runoff against Demo- crat Jim Martin that drew politi- cal luminaries from both parties to the state and flooded the airwaves with fresh attack ads weeks after campaigns elsewhere had ended. Minnesota - where a recount is under way - now remains the only unresolved Senate contest in the country. But the stakes there are significantly lower now that Geor- gia has put a 60-seat Democratic supermajority out of reach. With 92 percent of the precincts reporting, Chambliss captured 58 percent to Martin's 42 percent. Chambliss' win is a rare bright spot for Republicans in a year where they lost the White House as well as seats in the House and the Senate. WASHINGTON Gates: Military looks to accelerate Iraq pullout India Defense Secretary Robert Gates signaled a willingness Tues- day to forge ahead with two key priorities for the incoming Obama administration: accelerating the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq and shutting down the Guantanamo Bay detention center. As the only Republican Cabi- net member asked to stay on by President-elect Barack Obama, Gates told reporters that military commanders are looking at ways to more quickly pull troops out of Iraq in light of the 16-month time- table that was a centerpiece of the Democrat's campaign. He also said it will be a high priority to work with the new Congress on legislation that will enable the U.S. to close the deten- tion center at the U.S. naval base in Cuba, where about 250 terrorism suspects are still being held. WASHINGTON US official blames Pakistani group for attack National Intelligence Director Mike McConnell says the terrorist group U.S. intelligence believes car- ried out last week's attack in Mum- bai is the same one that attacked Mumbai trains in 2006. McConnell did not name the group during a speech at Harvard University. However, the Indian government has attributed the 2006 attack on Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistani terrorist group, and the Students Islamic Movement of India. McConnell is the first U.S. offi- cial to publicly identify Lashkar as the likely perpetrator. - Compiled from Daily wire reports MSA From Page 1A Musharraf while president. "We must not endorse and dig- nify such an individual," he said. Rep. Alex Serwer pointed to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's speech at Columbia University last year as an example of how a reviled figure can provoke conversation. "Things like this are really important for the educational experience," he said. "Personally, Musharraf makes me feel incredibly uncomfort- able," MSA Vice President Arvind Sohoni said. "And I think that's a good thing." After about 30 minutes of procedural maneuvering, the authors of the resolution finally agreed to create a committee that will revise a letter of invita- tion and make it clear that MSA only intends to invite Musharraf, not to glorify or support him. The resolution passed with a vote of 25-7-1. For the majority of the meet- ing, the body was taking care of "in/out" business-that is, out with the representatives whose terms expired and didn't run for reelection, and in with the new and reelected representatives. No incumbent representatives were defeated. After congratulating the new representatives, MSA President Sabrina Shingwani issued a stern ultimatum. "You were chosen by the stu- dents to represent them," she said. "If you're going to come here every week and sit at the table and do nothing, get up and leave right now." "You're notjusthere represent- ing students," she said. "You're representing U of M students. And we're the best damn univer- sity in the world." Student General Counsel Michael Benson warned the body about attendance rules. A representative who accumulates 12 absences is removed from the assembly and has two weeks to appeal at an MSA meeting. MSA has long been plagued by attendance issues. Every semes- ter, at least a handful of repre- sentatives are removed from the assembly for failing to fulfill their responsibilities. MSA Chief of Staff Ashley Schwedt said in an interview after the meeting that she thinks representatives end up dropping out or being removed because of expectations. "I think that a lot of people get really excited to win things, and to do things well," she said. Also, says Schwedt, people tend to underestimate their course loads. She added that some just "realize too late that MSA is not for them." The new representatives were given a handbook with back- ground information about the role. The packet included infor- mation about the assembly's committees and commissions, the procedure for proposing a resolution, the structure and conventions of meetings, and the rules for debate during meetings. The assembly held elections for 27 chair positions and vice chair positions for its committees and commissions. Many of the elections were uncontested, but a few led to debate. Perhaps the most heated and topical contest was for the Rules and Elections Commit- tee chair position. Reps. Jason Raymond, Ashley Schneider and Tim Hull were nominated for the spot. Schneider, the incumbent chair, boasted that fall election turnout increased by 80 percent under her leadership. Raymond, who won the seat, noted that while turnout may have increased, it was still only 9.6 percent, a figure he called "absolutely pitiful." "We shouldn't be spending time at meetings debating code amendments or things that are internal in nature," he said, add- ing that he thought he could bring the tangible progress that has been lacking in the past year. Raymond won the chairman- ship. - Vanessa Nunez contributed to this report. AUTOMAKERS From Page 1A The company plans to use that money to keep the lights on, but also to restructure so GM has fewer dealers, brands and employ- ees; in other words, a smaller payroll and less onerous debt payments. All three companies are trying to shrink to return to profitability. Their plant capacity, workforces and dealership ranks are all sized to build and sell far more cars than the Detroit Three are selling or will likely be able to sell inthe near future, excecutives said. It's the reduction in payroll and employees - things that will hap- pen even if GM gets federal loans - that will hurt the University and southeast Michigan. The Detroit Three's problems were driven home yesterday when automakers reported their sales for November. The numbers were bleak. U.S. auto sales dropped 37 per- cent, and Chrysler sold just over half as many vehicles last month than it did in November 2007. GM sold just 59 percent of its total sales lastyear. Things were almost as bad for foreign automakers like Toyota andHonda,whosawsalesdeclines of at least 30 percent. GM now employs 96,537 people in the United States. It's telling Congress that it aims to shed a third of those, employing between 65,000 and 75,000 in 2012. In 2000, 191,465 people worked for GM in the U.S. At the end of 2007, GM had more than 30,000 workers in Washtenaw, Macomb and Macomb counties, according to Crain's Detroit Business. Many of those workers have University ties. LSA sophomore Joseph Sut- kowi's father is a former GM employee. Sutkowi currently receives a scholarship from GM. "There's a fairly good chance that I won't be getting another $2,500 scholarship next year from GM," he said. "They're going to - in all likelihood - cut that out." -Kyle Swanson contributed to this report. BUY PHOTOS FROM THE DAILY. PHOTO.MICHIGANDAILY.COM