The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, October 21, 2011 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, October 21, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING Three tiger cubs welcomed at zoo The Potter Park Zoo in Lan- sing has some new residents that maybe seen online. The zoo announced this week that three female Amur tigers were born Sept. 13. They're the third set of Amur tiger cubs born at the zoo in the past 20 years. Two days after their birth, tests run by the veterinary staff at Potter Park Zoo and Michigan State University revealed pneu- monia in the cubs. They were taken from their mother and treated with antibiotics, and are now being hand-fed and raised by zoo staff. WASHINGTON College sports face antitrust issues The top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee is urging the panel to hold hear- ings on antitrust and other issues in college sports, including the recent series of conference realignments. "It has become increasingly clear to me that the combina- tion of issues and challenges fac- ing intercollegiate sports have reached a tipping point calling for congressional attention," Michi- gan Rep. John Conyers wrote to the committee chairman, Texas Republican Lamar Smith, in a let- ter released yesterday. The com- mittee said in a statement that it is reviewing Conyers' request. Several major colleges have recently announced plans to switch conferences, including Syracuse and Pittsburgh from the Big East to the ACC, and Texas A&M from the Big 12 to the Southeastern Conference. CARACAS, Venezuela Chavez announces he is cancer-free Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said he is cancer-free, citing a series of medical exams in Cuba that showed no recur- rence of the illness following two months of chemotherapy treat- ments. The 57-year-old leader announced the test results on live television yesterday after return- ing from Cuba, saying thorough exams found no sign of any malig- nant cells in his body. "I'm free of illness," Chavez said on state television, wearing military fatigues as he arrived in the southwestern town of La Fria. Crowds of supporters cheered for Chavez as he rode in a caravan to the town of La Grita, where he visited a church that is home to a famed image of Christ, whom Chavez referred to as "the coman- dante of comandantes." Chavez said he came to give thanks for his recovery. "It's like a miracle that I'm standing here," he said, speaking to red-clad supporters who filled a square and waved excitedly to him. MEXICO CITY, Mexico U.S. accused of dumping criminals at Mexico boarder Mexican President Felipe Calderon accused the United States yesterday of dumping crim- inals at the border because it is cheaper than prosecuting them, and said the practice has fueled violence in Mexico's border areas. U.S. officials earlier this week reported a record number of deportations in fiscal year 2011, and said the number of deportees with criminal convictions had nearly doubled since 2008. "There are many factors in the violence that is being experienced in some Mexican border cities, but one of those is that the Ameri- can authorities have gotten into the habit of simply deporting 60 (thousand) or 70,000 migrants per year to cities like Ciudad Juarez or Tijuana," Calderon told an immi- gration conference. -Compiled from Daily wire reports OCCUPY A2 From Page 1A ment pooled its resources and now communicates more efficiently. As a result, the camp attracted dona- tions including food, tarps, sleep- ing bags, banners and camping gear. "The first week was really cha- otic, but we're really getting our organization together and getting a lot of resources together," Levi- joki said. Still, Levijoki said she thinks the protest is "not as organized as it could be." Though the encamp- ment has received plenty of food - even enough to donate a por- tion to Occupy Detroit and Occupy Lansing - other supplies are lim- ited due to a lack of coordination among movement leaders. To prevent future logisti- cal issues, the assembly formed a scheduling committee to plan events and communicate infor- mation to the public. The assem- bly members also discussed a proposal to set up a workshop for protesters to learn about outreach, rights, non-violent protests and methods for writing effective let- ters to politicians - initiatives that movement participants hope will further the scope of Occupy Ann Arbor. Several protesters who were invited to speak in front of the crowd urged participants to foster solidarity between local, regional and global Occupy movements. Whitney Miller, a recent Univer- sity alum who started Occupy Ann Arbor through a Facebook page, stressed the importance of relationships between the move- ments. "The direct action committee has been working very actively to research, gather resources, check legality, secure safety and plan an effective occupation," Miller said. Miller added that the move- mentis onlytwo weeks old and has much potential to grow, become more unified and gain more sup- port. An encouraging sign, Miller said, is the Ann Arbor Education Association's - a citywide teach- ers union - endorsement of the Occupy movements. Despite the speaker's positiv- ity, several protesters raised con- cerns including the feasibility of an occupation in Liberty Plaza as winter nears. Several participants also discussed the safety of the plaza. Jeff Fulkerson, a junior at Washtenaw Community College and a participant at last night's gathering, said the square is noto- rious for drug and alcohol prob- lems, which have been apparent duringthe encampment. Fulkerson said a homeless man unaffiliated with the movement threatened the protesters camp- ing in the plaza and used drugs in the area. The situation made some protesters, including studentsy flee the plaza out of fear, he said. Fulk- erson added that he'd like to see the movement moved to another park - a proposition other !pro- testers supported. "Most of the students have either left or fled the scene because they are afraid of the person," Fulkerson said. "These scenes need tobe addressed." CHARLIE St BERGALL/AP Mitt Romney, Republican presidential candidate and former Massachusetts governor, speaks during an economic roundtable at the Treynor State Bank, yesterday, in Treynor, Iowa. In Obama vs. Romney, echoes of Bush vs. Kerry 2012 presidential contest shaping up like 2004 election WASHINGTON (AP) - A beleaguered president seeks re-election. His challenger, a candidate with Massachu- setts roots and a presiden- tial demeanor straight out of central casting, has to fight through a primary contest fending off charges of flip- flopping. In the end, the chal- lenger's strength also proves his vulnerability. Election 2012 is looking a lot like the presidential race of 2004. Democrats in and around President Barack Obama's campaign are preparing to run against former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney - the man they believe likely to emerge from the Republican contest - byborrowingfromthe playbook George W. Bush and Republi- cans used to defeat Sen. John Kerry seven years ago. As candidates, Kerry and Romney are remarkably similar. Both are wealthy men, prod- ucts of Massachusetts politics, eloquent on the stump but per- ceived as remote or aloof on the campaign circuit. Even before Romney has won a single nominating con- test, Obama's camp is singling him out as a fickle politician and is preparing to go straight at Romney's perceived strength - his record as a businessman in the face of a flat-line econo- my. It was a strategy Republi- cans employed against Kerry, who faced flip-flopping claims himself and whose strength as a decorated Vietnam veteran running in the first post-Sept. 11 election was undermined by attack ads. A key feature of the Obama strategy is Romney's tenure as head of Bain Capital, a private MANAEDBY MIKI JAPANESE RESTAURANT equity firm he co-founded in 1984 that saved and launched businesses such as Staples and Domino's Pizza but sliced jobs elsewhere through cost-cutting and consolidation. It's not the first time Rom- ney's tenure at the helm of Bain Capital has come under attack. Sen. Edward M. Ken- nedy pulled away from Rom- ney during his 1994 Senate race in Massachusetts by airing a series of ads that featured work- ers from an Indiana paper plant that Bain took over, laying off employees, cutting wages and reducingbenefits. "Basically, he cut our throats," a worker said in one of the ads. "When we made the decision to define him to voters of Mas- sachusetts and took a hard line in doing so, we had a lot of suc- cess," said Democratic consul- tant Tad Devine, who crafted the ads for Kennedy and later served as a senior adviser to Kerry's presidential campaign. Obama advisers are keenly aware of Kennedy's line of attack and are counting on sim- ilar results. "In his professional life, he was an expert in stripping down companies and leading them to bankruptcy and profit- ing from these ventures, with a lot of jobs lost in the process," said Obama strategist David Axelrod, previewing a potential line of attack. "Whenever you're running for president of the United States and you represent your- self ina certain way and you say here's my core asset, then you need to be able to stand by your record," Axelrod added in an interview. "It was problematic for him then; it will be problem- atic for him now." Republicans concede that Romney could be vulnerable. But they say the Romney camp should be ready for the onslaught. Michael Dennehy, a New Hampshire-based Republican strategist, said he remembers Kennedy's anti-Romney ads as being "just brutal and very, very effective." "To some extent it will be effective again," he said. "The variable is how Romney responds and what they have learned from that 1994 race for Senate." Dennehy, who helped run Sen. John McCain's presiden- tial races in 2000 and 2008, added: "I think we can expect from Obama's campaign a very scorched-earth approach. It's the only way he can win." Top Romney strategist Eric Fehrnstrom said Obama, faced with a stagnant economy, is grasping for ways to win. "Now, they are employing a 'kill Mitt' strategy," he said. "I suspect they'll go through many other strategies before they realize this election is a referendum on Obama's failed leadership on jobs." FOLLOW THE DAILY ON TWITTER @MichiganDaily @MichDailySports @MichDailyFball @MichDailyHockey @Mich DailyBball @MichDailyNews @MichDailyArts @Mich DailyPhoto @MichDailyOpEd 40TH ANNIVERSARY SALE 20 40 4- - I