9 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, March 31 2009 -- 3 NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Henderson takes the reins at GM General Motors Corp.'s new chief executive said yesterday there's a greater risk that the company will have to reorganize through bankruptcy, because of greater demands from the Obama administration to get debt off its balance sheet. Fritz Henderson told reporters on aconferencecall thatthe compa- ny would still prefer to restructure outside of court, but the various support mechanisms Obama out- lined yesterday would provide a better cushion for the company to reorganize under a court-order bankruptcy if necessary. "We were encouraged, we talk- ed to the auto task force about ulti- mately bringingthe consumer back in the game," he said. O President Obama said he would give GM additional days to present and make progress on restructur- ing plans that are expected to go further than what was submitted in Feburary. He also introduced a program that would guarantee warranties of GM and Chrysler LLC vehicles going forward, and would allow people purchasing new cars this year to write off the sales and excise tax of the vehicle. "We understand what the game plan is," Henderson said. "Whether out of court or in court, either way, they'll be there to support us." DETROIT * City newspapers cut back on delivery Michigan's two largest newspa- pers were missing from front porch- es yesterday as the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News began an era of reduced home delivery and announced a plan to eventually transmittheirprinteditionstothou- sands of new electronic devices. The newspapers were hawked for free on sidewalks and streets for one day only to remind people that the News and Free Press are not going out of business but undergoing significant change at a time of vanishing ad revenue and a deep recession. The papers will continue to be printedandsoldeachday,buthome deliveryis limited to Thursday, Fri- day and Sunday, the biggest ad days of the week. Subscribers can see the exact print version online on * any day, and free content is avail- able atfreep.comanddetnews.com. DUND, Afghanistan Suicide bomber's attack kills nine A suicide bomber wearing a police uniform blew himself up inside a police headquarters in southern Afghanistan yesterday, killing nine people and wounding eight, an official said. Five officers and four civilians died in the attack in Dund district, about10 miles (15kilometers) south of Kandahar city, the Interior Min- istry said in a statement. The attack comes as the United States prepares to send 21,000 additional troops to Afghanistan to bolster the 38,000 American forces already in the country. President Barack Obama last week announced a new strategy for the Afghanistan-Pakistan region with a goal to "disrupt, dismantle and defeat" al-Qaida. Intotal,there arearecord 70,000 internationalforcesinAfghanistan. BOSTON Cops shoot boy who killed his sisters Two sisters and the brother who killed them with a kitchen knife will share a single funeral service and be buried together. Samantha Revelus, 17, and her sister, Bianca, 5, were killed at their Milton home Saturday. Police shot the girls' brother, Kerby Revelus, 23, after an officer saw him decapi- tate the younger girl. A surviving sister, 9-year-old Saraphina, was recovering at a Boston hospital Monday after having surgery. Ernst Guerrier, a Boston attor- ney and family friend, said he spent Monday morning with par- ents Regine and Vronze Revelus as they made plans to bury the three together. "They are still dealing with the shock and disbelief of losing three of their children," said Guerrier. Guerriersaidtherewasnothingto indicate Kerby Revelus "was capable of something like this or that this tragedy could have been prevented." - Compiled from Daily wire reports Obama rejects auto plans, demands cuts GM gets 60 days, Chrysler gets 30 days to restructure WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Barack Obama asserted unprecedented government con- trol over the auto industry yester- day, bluntly rejecting turnaround, plans by General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC, demanding fresh concessions for long-term federal aid and raising the possibility of quick bankruptcy for either ailing auto giant. Obama took the extraordinary step of announcing the govern- ment will back new car warranties issued by both GM and Chrysler, an attempt to reassure consumers their U.S.-made purchases will be protected even if the companies don't survive. "I am absolutely committed to working with Congress and the auto companies to meet one goal: The United States of America will lead the world in building the next generation of clean cars," Obama said in his first extended remarks on the industry since taking office nearly 10 weeks ago. And yet, he added, "our auto industry is not moving in the right direction fast enough to succeed." Obama, flanked by several administration officials at the White House, announced a short- term infusion of cash for the firms, and said it could be the last for one or both. Chrysler, judged by the admin- istration as too small to survive, got 30 days' worth of funds to com- plete a partnership with Fiat SpA, the Italian manufacturer, or some other automaker. GM got assurances of 60 days' worth of federal financing to try and revise its turnaround plan undernewmanagementwith heavy government participation. That would involve concessions from its union workers and bondholders. The administration engineered the ouster of longtime CEO Rick Wag- oner over the weekend, an indica- tion of its deep involvement in an industry that once stood as a sym- bol of American capitalism. Obama's announcement under- scored the extent to which auto- makers have been added to the list of large corporations now operat- ing under a level of government control that seemed unthinkable less than a year ago. Since last fell, the Bush and Obama admin- istrations, often acting in concert with the Federal Reserve, have engineered the takeover of hous- ing titans Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, seized a large stake in several banks and installed a new CEO at bailed-out insurance giant Ameri- can International Group. Other presidents have forced showdowns with major industries, with mixed results. Harry Tru- man's decision to nationalize the steel industry on the eve of a strike in 1952 was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. But Ronald Reagan succeeded in busting the air traffic controllers' union three decades later. The latest addition to the list, the once-proud auto industry, has struggled with foreign competi- tion for more than a generation, then was further battered by the recession and credit crisis grip- ping the economy. Obama said 400,000 industry jobs have been lost in the past year alone, many in Michigan. Under Fritz Henderson, newly named as CEO, General Motors issued a statement saying it hopes to avoid bankruptcy, but will "take whatever steps are necessary to successfully restructure the com- pany, which could include a court- supervised process." Chrysler Chairman Bob Nardelli sought to assure customers, deal- ers, suppliers and employees that the automaker "will operate 'busi- ness as usual' over the next 30 days" while working closely with the government and Fiat to secure the support of stakeholders. Speaking from the White House, President Barack Obama calls on the auto indus try yesterday to make further cuts in exchange for long-term federal aid. Int'l. conference aims to bring stability to Afghanistan, region Rescue workers carry an injured Pakistani police officer outside a police training school on the outskirts of Lahore, Pakistan yes- terday. Gunmen armed with rifles and hand grenades attacked a the school Monday, killing 11 officers and wounding dozens. Sdie in bloody siege at Paklstan police academy Meeting of 72 nations convened hastily, despite lofty goals THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) - A 72-nation conference on Afghanistan will launch a broader international commitment to the security of the region, including neighboring Pakistan, special U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke said yesterday. The hastily convened confer- ence opening today in this Dutch city brings together all the coun- tries bordering Afghanistan, including Iran, and all nations contributing troops to the NATO- led international force fighting Taliban insurgents. It will be opened by U.N. Sec- retary-General Ban Ki-moon and Afghan President Hamid Rarzai. "We have great expectations," Karzai said after arriving yester- day night. "I'm sure there will be support for Afghanistan ... and that together, Afghanistan and the international community will strive and succeed towards the completion of this journey together." With the meeting scheduled to last just seven hours including lunch, few countries will be able to give a nuanced analysis on the con- ference's stated theme: a compre- hensive review of Afghan strategy in a regional context. Most will not have a chance to speak at all. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clintonwas expectedtooutlinethe policy review unveiled last week by President Barack Obama. The president said he will send an extra 17,000 soldiers and 4,000 advisers to train Afghan military forces, plus hundreds more civilians to work on development issues. More than half of the 70,000 troops now in Afghanistan are Americans. Despite its brevity, Holbrooke said the "big tent meeting" in The Hague is "tremendously impor- tant," and its success already was guaranteed by the lengthy list of attendees. "The very fact that they are here signals that the world has not for- gotten Afghanistan, and that now we know that Pakistan is part of the issue," he said. Of the 73 nations invited, only Uzbekistan has declined to come, organizers said Monday. Holbrooke called the confer- ence "the launch point for the international recommitment to the effort in Afghanistan and western Pakistan." Unlike previous international conferences, the Hague meeting was not intended to raise money or troops - issues that may be raised at subsequent meetings including a NATO summit next weekend. But Holbrooke said the U.S. administration is devoting much thought to financing the Afghan operation. - Pakistan security officials say militant groups destabilizing the country LAHORE, Pakistan (AP) - Black-clad Pakistani commandos overpowered a group of militants who had seized a police academy, took cadets hostage and killed at least six of them yesterday in a dramatic challenge to the civilian government that faces U.S. pressure to defeat Islamic extremists. The security forces stormed the compound on the outskirts of Lahore to end the eight-hour siege by the grenade-throwing gun- men, with three militants blow- ing themselves up and authorities arresting four, officials said. At least three other unidentified bod- ies were recovered. Pakistan's top civilian security official said militant groups were "destabilizing the country," sug- gesting the plot may have originat- ed with Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud. Meanwhile, a Taliban member claiming to speak on behalf of a shadowylittle-knowngroup called the Fedayeen al-Islam said it was behind the attack. Earlier this month, gunmen ambushed Sri Lanka's cricket team in Lahore, killing seven people and underscoring militants' ability to wreak havoc far from Pakistan's northwestern regions bordering Afghanistan where al-Qaida and the Taliban have proliferated. Both Lahore attacks followed a crackdown on the Pakistani group Lashkar-e-Taiba, blamed for the November 2008 siege in Mumbai, India, that killed 164. There has been speculation that Monday's raid was revenge for the crack- down. The primary victims of both attacks were Pakistan's under- manned and underequipped police, a militant strategy that appears designed to expose state institutions as weak. Pakistan's inability to prevent the attack appeared to be an intel- ligence failure. Nonetheless, a mas- sive response was quickly mounted yesterday, one that included army soldiers, armored vehicles and helicopters. The siege ended after security forces cornered several militants on the top floor of a building in the compound, where the gunmen had held about 35 hostages. Afterward, the security forces fired their guns in the air in celebration, shouting "God is great!" "The eight hours were like eight centuries," said Mohammad Sal- man, 23, a recruit who had holed up in the building. "It was like I died several times. I had made up my mind that it was all over." Interior MinistrychiefRehman Malik suggested the culprit could have been Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a Punjab-based, al-Qaida-linked Sunni extremist group implicat- ed in several other attacks in the country. Lashkar-e-Jhangvi is one of sev- eral militant groups that operate well beyond Pakistan's northwest. Some of them, including Lashkar- e-Taiba, have their roots in the Kashmir dispute with India, and Pakistani spy agencies are believed to have helped establish them. II I Tuesdays Are South Of The Border Corona/Dos Equis Specials All Night $2 c wf enarase & a vodkf Drinks g 25% Off Mexican Fare & NO COVER Jagor BomE Soc as 10 to Close F30 ae Sa14 600 o e Wt K yar USt~w