The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, February 19, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING, Mich. Michigan's 'wish list' for stimulus Obama pitches $75B lifeline for Cole discusses militant uprising in Iraq conflict funds goes online homeowners Gov. Jennifer Granholm's administration created a Web site yesterday that broadly outlines her priorities for spending Michi- gan's share of the federal stimulus money. The site includes a 1,200-plus page wish list of projects that edu- cational institutions, local gov- ernments and state agencies hope might get a share of the federal stimulus cash. But it doesn't give specifics on how much money the state will get or how it will be dis- tributed. None of the 16,000 submitted project requests - worth about $59 billion combined - have been approved. The Granholm adminis- tration warns on the Web page that not all the projects will be funded and that some wouldn't even be eli- gible for funding. Granholm, a Democrat, is expected to discuss the federal stimulus plan with local transpor- tation officials at events in Lansing, Detroit and Flint tomorrow and in Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo tomorrow. TEXAS TOWNSHIP, Mich. Wind farm academy coming to college in Kalamazoo Kalamazoo Valley Community College is creating an academy to train students to work on turbines found on wind farms. The 26-week program will start training technicians in October to repair and install utility-grade tur- bines. College leaders on Wednesday turned on the school's new 145- foot wind turbine. The turbine can produce up to 15 percent of the electricity for the college's techni- cal wing. Officials says the academy will be the first of its kind inthe country to train wind, turbine technicians. Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granhoim is trying to boost the alternative energy industry in the state, so there could be more "green" jobs available in coming years. BATON ROUGE, La. GOP governors might pass on stimulus money A handful of Republican gover- nors are considering turning down some money from the federal stim- uluspackage, amove opponents say puts conservative ideology ahead of the needs of constituents strug- gling with record foreclosures and soaring unemployment. Though none has outright rejected the money available for education, health care and infra- structure, the governors of Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alaska, South Carolina and Idaho have all questioned whether the $787 bil- lion bill signed into law this week will even help the economy. "My concern is there's going to be commitments attached to it that are a mile long," said Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who considered reject- P ing some of the money but decided Wednesday to accept it. "We need the freedom to pick and choose. And we need the freedom to say 'No thanks."' WASHINGTON Troops 'stalemated' in Afghanistan, commander says The top U.S. commander in Afghanistan offered a grim view Wednesday of military efforts in southern Afghanistan, warning that 17,000 new troops will take on emboldened Taliban insur- gents who have "stalemated" U.S. and allied forces. Army Gen. David McKier- nan also predicted that the bol- stered numbers of U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan - about 55,000 in all - will remain near those levels for up to five years. Still, McKiernan said, that is only about two-thirds of the num- ber of troops he has requested to secure the war-torn nation. McKiernan told reporters at the Pentagon on Wednesday that the extra Army and Marine forces will be in place by the summer, primed for counterinsurgency operations against the Taliban. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Lending plan aims to prevent 9 million homeowners from being evicted MESA, Ariz. (AP) - President Barack Obama threw a $75 bil- lion lifeline to millions of Ameri- cans on the brink of foreclosure yesterday, declaring an urgent need for drastic action - not only to save their homes but to keep the housing crisis "from wreak- ing even greater havoc" on the broader national economy. The lending plan, a full $25 bil- lion bigger than the administra- tion had been suggesting, aims to prevent as many as 9 million homeowners from being evicted and to stabilize housing markets that are at the center of the ever- worsening U.S. recession. Government support pledged to mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is being dou- bled as well, to $400 billion, as part of an effort to encourage them to refinance loans that are "under water" - those in which homes' market values have sunk below the amount the owners still owe. "All of us are paying a price for this home mortgage crisis, and all of us will pay an even steep- er price if we allow this crisis to continue to deepen," Obama said. The new president, focusing closely on the economy, in his first month in office, rolled out the housing program one day after he was in Denver to sign his $787 billion emergency stimu- lus plan to revive the rest of the economy. And his administra- tion is just now going over fresh requests for multiple billions in bailout cash from ailing auto- makers. Wall Street has shown little confidence in the new steps, declining sharply on Tuesday before leveling off after Wednes- day's announcement. The Dow Jones industrials rose 3 points for the day. Success of the foreclosure res- cue is far from certain. The administration is loosen- ing refinancing restrictions for many borrowers and providing incentives for lenders in hopes that the two sides will work together to modify loans. But no one is required to participate. The biggest players in the mort- gage industry temporarily had halted foreclosures in advance of Obama's plan. Regional resources helped to finance insurgency, Cole says By ANNIE THOMAS For the Daily In a lecture yesterday, Juan Cole, professor of Middle Eastern and South Asian history at the Univer- sity and an expert on the Middle East, discussed howa band of mili- tants in Iraqwere foiled many of the plans the U.S. political and military officials had for the country. The event, sponsored by the Col- lege of Literature, Science and the Arts, introduced Cole as the Richard P. Mitchell Collegiate Professor in History, an honor acknowledgingthe accomplishments of the most senior faculty members at the University. The lecture - entitled "Collec- tive Action in American Iraq: Can the People Thwart Empire?" - detailed the Bush administration's actions in Iraq and how its plans and policies were thwarted by groups of militants. Cole said officials in the U.S. gov- ernment didn't anticipate that their goals would be challenged in Iraq. "The Bush administration had a set of goals in. Iraq which, they didn't announce publicly...and they gave interviews, and if you are good at Lexus Nexus you can find out what they thought they were up to," he said. "And those goals were undone by Iraqis of various sorts, including slum doctors and poor people and workers and union members and so forth." He went on to discuss the role of Iraq's unique culture in the con- flict. The country houses regional resources which, when taken over by militant groups, funded their efforts. He cited hijacked petro- leum and looted antiquities as the main revenue sources. "It was not well known by the people who planned this occupation but it has certain features, which made it a poison pill and made it particularly difficult to occupy, dominate, exploit," Cole said. Prof. Juan Cole discusses the situation in Iraq during a lecture yesterday For automakers, no easy solutions Cole added that he thinks Presi- dent Barack Obama doesn't have a thorough knowledge of the details that he outlined in his lecture, but that he is well equipped to handle the situation in Iraq. "I don't think (Obama) probably knows these details about Iraq but I think he knows what colonialism was and the damage that it did to people's psyches," he said. "And so I think his instincts on this are good." Cole also said though the mili- tary is somewhat divided on the withdrawal, many military officials' are looking for a way out. "I do have some contacts in Washington, my own feeling from them, is the senior officers, they're really sick and tired of Iraq and they think it's breaking the army and they want out," he said. Ann Arbor resident Peter Ber- tocci, who attended the lecture, said he found it to be informative and thought provoking. "What he did was essentially package everything in a way which made it coherent and gave you something to think about what happened," he said. Rackham Graduate School stu- dent Andrea Wright, who is study- ing anthropology and history, said the lecture gave her the resources to evaluate the U.S. presence in Iraq. "I think it confirmed suspicions and gave me information to be able to critique and thinkaboutthe U.S's role and think through its goals and what ideological positions informed those goals," she said. GM, Chrysler say they need billions more to stay afloat WASHINGTON (AP) - Gen- eral Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC, two venerable titans of American industry, will burn through $17.4 billion in govern- ment loans in three months and want billions more to stay alive. The ink is still drying on their new requests for an additional $21.6 billion, but for President Barack Obama's month-old administration, there are no easy answers. Give them more money? GM and Chrysler could return seek- ing more. Let them slip into bankruptcy? Hundreds of thou- sands of jobs could be lost. Try a government-led bankruptcy? In GM's case, that might cost up to $100 billion. "There can't be a bottom- less pit to this. There aren't the resources to deal with it," White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said Wednesday as the government began reviewing the automakers' plans. "We have to get a sustained path to that restructuring to ensure that there isn't a constant necessity for continued govern- ment intervention and money from the taxpayers," Gibbs said. At stake is much more than the future of the PT Cruiser or the Saturn Vue. Jobs at assembly plants, car dealers, parts suppli- ers and the small businesses that serve them could be at risk in a fatigued economy in which near- ly 12 million people are unem- ployed, including about 600,000 who got pink slips last month. "This is an entire way of life here," said Republican Rep. Thaddeus McCotter who repre- sents a district near Detroit. "An entire state is hanging in the balance." WRITE FOR DAILY NEWS E-mail smilovitz@michigandaily.com. A PICTURE OF YOUR FUTURE SUMMER PLACE IN. NYC IS NOW APPEARING AT STUDENTHOUSINGORGI PICTURE Clean. Modern. Safe. Bright. See it all. And then see it disappear if you don't act on it fast. QUALITY STUDENT LIVING www.studenthousing.org/picture 800.297.4694 A