The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, January 7, 2009 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, January 7, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON Gupta considered for surgeon general position President-elect Barack Obama has approached CNN's chief medi- cal correspondent, Sanjay Gupta, to be the country's next surgeon general, the cable network said yes- terday. CNN said it has kept Gupta from reporting on health care policy and other matters involving the incom- ing Obama administration since learning he was under consider- ation for the post. Two Democrats with knowl- edge of the discussions over the surgeon general spot said Gupta was under consideration but cau- tioned there was not yet a final decision on who would fill the post. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media on the matter. Obama's transition office did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Gupta hosts "House Call" on CNN and contributes reports to CBS News. JERUSALEM Israel agrees to "humanitarian corridor" in Gaza Israel says it has agreed to set up a "humanitarian corridor" to ship vital supplies to the people of the Gaza Strip. The office of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert says in a statement that the humanitarian corridor idea came from the U.N. Security Council, and he accepted it. Under the plan, Israel would suspend attacks in specified areas of Gaza to allow the people to get supplies. The statement early today said the goal was to "pre- vent a humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip." Israel insists it has allowed enough supplies into the terri- tory during 11 days of conflict, but the U.N. says there is already a humanitarian crisis there because of shortages of food, fuel and medicine. WASHINGTON Reps. Schauer, Peters sworn into U.S. House Michigan's new members of Congress saidyesterdaytheyhoped to use their committee assignments to give the state's ragged economy a needed boost. Democrats Mark Schauer and Gary Peters were sworn into the U.S. House, joining a large class of freshmen lawmakers who are expected to act on a multibillion- dollar economic stimulus plan dur- ing the first weeks of President-elect Barack Obama's administration. "I'm ready to get to work," said Schauer, of Battle Creek. Schauer, the former minor- ity leader in the state Senate, was selected to serve on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, which will shepherd road and bridge construction proj- ects considered a key part of the stimulus package. Peters, a former state senator and state lottery commissioner,; was chosen for a seat on the House Financial Services Committee, which took a lead role in shap- ing the $700 billion bailout of the financial sector last fall and a separate aid package for domestic automakers. WASHINGTON Feinstein says Senate should seat Blagojevich's pick The chairman of the Senate Rules Committee has parted with many of her Democratic colleagues and says that the Senate should seat former Illinois Attorney General Roland Burris. Sen. Dianne Feinstein of Cali- fornia said yesterday that Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, however tainted by corruption charges, has the right to appoint someone to President-elect Barack Obama's former seat. The Rules Committee decides whether Burris is qualified to serve. Feinstein said that blocking Burris would have ramifications for other governors' appoint- ments. - Compiled from Daily wire reports A France, Egypt push for Gaza cease-fire (PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAI/AP> Members of the House of Representatives of the 111th Congress, accompanied by family members and guests, are sworn in at the House Chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington. New Congress vows to fix crisis-rdden -ieconomy At least 30 Palestinians left dead after mortar shells explode GAZA CITY, Gaza (AP) - France and Egypt announced an initiative to stop the fighting in Gaza late yesterday, hours after Israeli mortar shells exploded near a U.N. school sheltering hun- dreds of people displaced by the onslaught on Hamas militants. At least 30 Palestinians died, staining streets with blood. FrenchForeign MinisterBernard Kouchner released no details of the cease-fire plan, saying at the U.N. Security Council that the presi- dents of his country and Egypt were awaiting aresponse from Israel. Israeli officials in Jerusalem declined immediate comment on the announcement, which came amid diplomatic efforts by the U.S. and other nations to resolve a con- flict between Israel and the Islam- ic militants of Hamas that has seen 600 people killed in11days. President-elect Barack Obama broke his silence on the crisis Tuesday, saying that "the loss of civilian life in Gaza and in Israel is a source of deep concern for me." He declined to go further, reiter- ating his stance that the U.S. has only one president at a time. Israel's military said its shelling at the school - the deadliest single episode since Israeli ground forces invaded Gaza on Saturday after a week of air bombardment - was a response to mortar fire from with- in the school and said Mamas mili- tants were using civilians as cover. Two residents of the area who spoke with The Associated Press by telephone said they saw a small group of militants firing mortar rounds from a street near the school, where 350 people had gathered to get away from the shelling. They spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal. Majed Hamdan, an AP pho- tographer, rushed to the scene shortly after the attacks. At the hospital, he said, many children were among the dead. "I saw women and men - par- ents - slapping their faces in grief, screaming, some of them collapsed to the floor. They knew their children were dead," he said. "In the morgue, most of the killed appeared to be children. In the hospital, there wasn't enough space for the wounded." He said there appeared to be marks on the pavement of five sepa- rate explosions in area of the school. An Israeli defense official, speaking on condition of anonym- ity because he was not allowed to make the information public, said it appeared the military used 120- mm shells. Burris kept from claiming seat in Senate WASHINGTON (AP) - The Capitol rang loud with vows to fix the crisis-ridden economy yesterday as Congress opened for business at the dawn of a new Democratic era. "We need action and we need action now," said Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Republicans agreed, and pledged cooperation in Congress as well as with President-elect Barack Obama - to a point. On a day largely devoted to cer- emony, new members of Congress and those newly re-elected swore to defend the Constitution. The Senate galleries were crowded; children and grandchildren of lawmakers squirmed in their seats in the House chamber as the winners in last fall's elections claimed their prizes. One office-seeker was not among them. In a scripted bit of political the- ater, Democrat Roland Burris of Illinois was informed he would not be seated because his paper- work was not in order. He pledged a lawsuit, the latest twist in a political drama that began when he was named to Obama's Sen- ate seat by Gov. Rod Blagojevich, who has been charged with having attempted to sell the appointment. Obama was across town in a meeting with his economic advis- ers as the opening gavels fell in the House and Senate at noon. His inauguration as the nation's first black president is two weeks away. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a veteran of numerous battles with President George W. Bush, made plain how glad he was the old administration was winding down. "We are ready to answer the call of the American people by put- ting the past eight years behind us and delivering the change that our country desperatelyneeds,"he said on the Senate floor. We are grate- ful to begin anew with a far more robust Democratic majority." At the same time, in comments directed at Republicans, he said, "we are in this together" when it comes to the economy, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, health care and the country's energy needs. Sen. Mitch McConnell of Ken- tucky, the Republican leader, replied in a speech of his own, saying, "The opportunities for cooperation are numerous." He said Democrats should avoid a "reckless rush to meet anarbitrarydeadline" topass aneco- nomic stimulus bill that could reach $1 trillion, and he outlined possible changes in the approach Obama and the Democratic congressional lead- ers have been considering. Among themwas a proposal to cut taxes by 10 percent. Another was to lend money to hard-pressed state governments rather than give it to them. "States will be far less likely to spend it frivolously" in that case, he said. By the new political calculus, McConnell will soon be the most powerful Republican in government after elections that handed Demo- crats the White House and left them with gains of least seven seats in the Senate and 21 in the House. McConnell's counterpart in the House, Republican leader John Boehner of Ohio, handed the speaker's gavel to Pelosi in a traditional unity tableau. He, too, pledged cooperation, then said, "America's potential is unlimited. But government's potential is not. We must not confuse the two." Obama spent much of Monday in the Capitol, conferring with Republicans and Democrats alike on the economic stimulus measure he hopes to sign early in his term. The nation's consumer spending has plummeted, manufacturing has withered and job losr h nsc grown in recent months, adding urgency to the legislative effort in contrast to the customary sluggish start to a new Congress. WANT TO WORK FOR THE DA ILY? COME TO ONE OF OUR MASS MNE ETINGS. SUNDAY, JAN. 11, 8 P.M. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 14, 8 P.M. TUESDAY, JAN. 20,8 P.M. Coleman files lawsuit over Minnesota recount results Lawsuit alleges Canvassing Board made mistakes ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - Repub- lican Norm Coleman filed a lawsuit yesterday challenging Democrat Al Franken's apparent recount victory in Minnesota's U.S. Senate race, delaying a resolution of the contest for weeks or months. At a Capitol news conference filled with cheering supporters, Coleman said he won't accept a board's determination a day ear- lier that Franken captured 225 more votes in the November elec- tion. He had a seven-day window to file the lawsuit. "We are filing this contest to make absolutely sure every valid vote was counted and no one's was counted more than anyone else's," Coleman said. Coleman shrugged off the idea that he might concede the election to avoid a protracted fight thatcould leave Minnesota with only a single senator in Washington for months. "Something greater than expe- diency is at stake here," Coleman said. He added: "Democracy is not a machine. Sometimes it's messy and inconvenient, and reaching the best conclusion is never quick because speed is not the first objective, fairness is." State law prevents officials from issuing an election certificate until legal matters are resolved. Franken attorney Marc Elias called Coleman's lawsuit "essential- ly the same thin gruel, warmed-over leftovers from meals we've all been served over the lastfew weeks." He said that Coleman has the right to sue, but that doesn't mean his claims have merit, and he is confident Franken would prevail. Franken e-mailed supporters Tuesday to request donations to continue the fight, just as Coleman did a day earlier. Coleman, whose term expired Saturday, led Franken by 215 votes in the Nov. 4 count but that advan- tage flipped during a prolonged recount. In going to court, Coleman has three big challenges: raising money to pay escalatinglegal bills, proving the election was flawed and managing the public's desire to have the race over. "They definitely have an uphill fight on their hands," said Guy- Uriel Charles, a professor of elec- tion and constitutional law at the University of Minnesota. "Their legal theory will have to overcome a burden of proof, and then they have to find enough votes to over- come Franken's lead." That could prove difficult, since any bloc of new votes would almost surely include some for Franken, who declared victory Monday. A lawsuit gives both sides options they lacked during the recount, such as accessing voter rolls, inspecting machines and introducing testimony from elec- tion workers. Coleman's filing includes some of the points his lawyers have been making for weeks. It centers mainly on claims that hundreds of rejected absentee ballots from Republican-leaning areas should have been part of the recount, that some ballots in Democratic terri- tory were counted twice and that election officials were wrong to use machine tallies for a Minne- apolis precinct where ballots went missing. But there are new angles, too. The lawsuit alleges that the Canvassing Board made mistakes when determining voter intent on challenged ballots, that ineligible voters cast ballots and that some absentee ballots were erroneously opened early, raising chain-of- custody concerns. A race that was a couple of years in the making - Franken announced his campaign in Feb- ruary 2007 - is now two months past Election Day. The case would fall to a three- judge panel selected by Chief Jus- tice Eric Magnuson of the state Supreme Court, an appointee of Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty and a member of the Canvassing Board. The costs of the election law- suit fall to the losing campaign, although state law could require various units of government to foot the bill if their errors or irreg- ularities lead to a reversal. Get paid to be an IM Official for Rec Sports! New officials must attend Wed. January 7th 7:00 PM IM Sports Building Basketball [nner Tube Water Polo SMini Soccer Contact Nicole Green at 734.764.0515 or nmgreen@umich.edu RT SPORTS for more information m nTaMuRASo *