The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, September 29, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS HOLLAND, Mich. Glut of milk hurting Mich. dairy farmers Despite a worldwide milk glut that has sent prices plummeting, Michigan dairy farmers continue to produce milk at a loss, relying on subsidies to get them by as they wait for prices to improve. Producers face higher costs but less demand for milk, partly because of a dried-up export market. Just two years ago, around 10 percent of the state's milk went to Asian and other markets, but none of it is exported now, said Ira Krupp, a dairy expert with Michi- gan State University Extension. "When the world economy went in the toilet, so did our export market," Krupp told The Holland Sentinel for a story pub- lished Monday. At the heart of the problem is the nature of milk. Unlike grain farmers who can hold out for bet- ter prices by storing crops in a silo, dairymen must sell raw milk to processors or else it spoils. And cows keep producing regardless of economic conditions. DETROIT Detroit enrollment campaign to end Detroit Public Schools offi- cials soon will learn if visits by comedian Bill Cosby, more than 170 blue-painted doors and even an effort to scrawl skywriting above the city's riverfront will be enough to boost the struggling district's enrollment. The $500,000 "I'm In" cam- paign to get students into school ends tomorrow. State aid to each district is based on enroll- ment numbers submitted from Wednesday's fall count and a winter count last February. The district says that each student leaving Detroit Public Schools means $7,550 less in state aid. Detroit dropped below 100,000 students last year and has budgeted for 83,777 this fall. As part ofthe campaign, emer- gency financial manager Robert Bobb has gone door-to-door in recent weeks trying to persuade parents to keep their children in Detroit schools, or return them to the district. WASHINGTON NATO official: Additional Afghan training needed NATO's secretary general says the U.S. and its allies need to in- vest more in training and equip- pingAfghan security forces for the widening conflict in Afghanistan. Anders Fogh Rasmussen (AHN'-derz FOHG RAHS'-moo- sihn) said yesterday that "things are going to have to change" in Af- ghanistan to retain public support for the stalemated war. He also told the Atlantic Council think tank that NATO needs to start let- ting Afghan military and civilian officials take the lead in securing and building their war-torn na- tion. Rasmussen would not say whether he believes the U.S. should send more troops to Af- ghanistan, as the Obama adminis- tration is debating. He also gently chastised Americans who ques- tion allied nations' commitment to Afghanistan. SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico List shows 75 Gitmo prisoners cleared for release A list released by the U.S. mili- tary shows at least 75 Guantana- mo detainees have been cleared for release by a task force that has been sorting through the remain- ing prisoners as part of an Obama administration effort to shutter the jail. Navy Lt. Cmdr. Brook DeWalt, a spokesman for the prison that holds about 223 men, said yester- day the list in Arabic, Pashto and English was posted in common areas throughout the detention camps earlier this month. He said the list was an initiative by Rear Adm. Thomas H. Cope- man III, commander of the Joint Task Force that runs the U.S. off- shore prison in Cuba, to communi- cate directly to the detainees and deter rumors about transfers. - Compiled from Daily wire reports State budget talks near final deadline This photo, released by the Iranian semi-official Fars News Agency, claims to show the launch of an Iranian Revolutionary Guard Shahab-3 medium-range missile during a drill at an undisclosed location yesterday. Irn:mis sles can reach any place in the country Lawmakers have less than 36 hours to solve $2.8 billion deficit LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Michi- gan lawmakers are running low on time to balance the state's next bud- get. The Legislature is expected to return to session Tuesday morning and start taking key votes related to the government's spending plan. The House and Senate will have just 38 hours after they reconvene to erase a projected $2.8 billion deficit in the next fiscalyear. Lawmakers could pass an interim budget to extend the current fiscal year if they get worried they might miss the Thursday budget deadline. Failure to balance the budgetor pass an interim budget could result in Michigan's second partial govern- ment shutdown in the past three years. The Legislature did not meet Monday because of Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar. Democratic House Speaker Andy Dillon and Republican Senate Majority Leader Mike Bishop say they will beat the budget deadline. Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm is taking them at their word. "The governor and legislative leaders have all said that they do not want a shutdown of state govern- ment," Granholm spokeswoman Liz Boyd said Monday. "So we expect to be open for business on Thursday morning." Lawmakers are helped by the fact that federal stimulus money will wipe out more than half of the deficit. Dillon and Bishop agreed ear- lier this month to make at least $1.2 billion in spending cuts, a plan that would make it possible to balance the budget without tax increases. But some Democrats want more money to save high priority programs, caus- ing a divide within the party. Nearly 100,000 college students were due at least a portion ofa Mich- igan Promise scholarship worth $4,000 this academic year, but that program likely will be lost in this budget cycle without extra revenue. A member of Michigan State Uni- versity's College Democrats plans to visit the Capitol on Tuesday and ask lawmakers for personal donations to make up for her lost scholarship money, drawing further attention to the issue as the budget deadline nears. Hundreds of police, firefighters and other local government employ- ees could be laid off if revenue shar- ing cuts are too deep. Health care groups say that cutting Medicaid reimbursement rates could prompt more doctors to stop accepting low- income patients. The showdown between those who want higher taxes to save those programs and those who want to rely solely on cuts promises to pro- vide some tough votes in the Legis- lature over the next few days. Matt Marsden, a spokesman for Bishop, said the goal remains to stick to the agreement to "reduce the size and scope of government without tax increases." Iran says long-range missiles can reach Israel, parts of Europe and U.S. military bases TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Iran test- ed itslongest-range missiles yester- day and warned they can reach any place that threatens the country, including Israel, parts of Europe and U.S. military bases in the Mid- east. The launch capped two days of war games and was condemned as a provocation by Western pow- ers, which are demanding Tehran come clean about a newly revealed nuclear facility it has been secretly building. The tests Sunday and again yesterday added urgency to a key meeting this week between Iran and the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council and Germany - an international front seeking clear answers about the direction of its nuclear program. Iran's missile program and its nuclear work - much of it carried out in secrecy - have long been a concern for the United States, Isra- el and its Western allies. They fear Tehran is intent on developing an atomic weapons capability and the missiles to deploy such warheads, despite Iran's assurances it is only pursuing civilian nuclear power. In the latest exercise, the pow- erful Revolutionary Guard, which controls Iran's missile program, successfully tested upgraded ver- sions of Iran's medium-range Shahab-3 and Sajjil missiles, state television reported. Both can carry warheads and reach up to 1,200 miles, putting Israel, U.S. military bases in the Middle East and parts of Europe within striking distance. The launchings were meant to display Iran's military might and demonstrate its readiness to respond to any military threat. "Iranian missiles are able to target any place that threatens Iran," said Abdollah Araqi, a senior Revolutionary Guard commander, according to the semiofficial Fars news agency. Iran conducted three rounds of missile tests in drills that began Sunday, two days after the U.S. and its allies disclosed the country had been secretly developing an under- ground uranium enrichment facil- ity. The Western powers warned Iran must open the site to interna- tional inspection or face harsher international sanctions. Iran's Foreign Ministry spokes- man, Hasan Qashqavi, maintained the missile tests had nothing to do with the tension over the site, say- ing they were part of routine, long- planned military exercises. That assertion was rejected by the United States and its European allies. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs called the tests "pro- vocative in nature," adding: "Obvi- ously, these were ;pre-planned military exercises." 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