The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, September 13, 2012 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, Sephember 13, 2012 - 7A U.S. poverty rate increases, household income decreases Am he( WAS The r remain last yea droppe people insuran A release mixed well-be 2011 as phase campai is the N The stood a unchan rate in had ex erty ra year, I efits an stave t ed. For erty lin of $23,0 Whi slightly Number of gap between rich and poor increased. The median, or mid- ericans without point, household income was $50,054, 1.5 percent lower than alth insurance 2010 and a second straight annu- al decline. also drops In a blog post, the White House said the latest figures HINGTON (AP) - show that government policies anks of America's poor can help the poor, middle class ed stuck at a record level and uninsured, while more work ir while household income remains to be done. d. Still, the number of "While we have made progress who don't have health digging our way out of the worst nce declined. economic crisis since the Great Census Bureau report Depression, too many families d Wednesday provided a are still struggling and Congress picture of the economic must act on the policies Presi- ing of U.S. households for dent Obama has put forward to the nation enters the final strengthen the middle class and of a presidential election those trying to get into it," the gn in which the economy White House post said. o. 1 issue. At a fundraising event in overall poverty rate Jacksonville, Fla., Obama's GOP it 15 percent, statistically rival for the White House, Mitt ged from the 15.1 percent Romney, said the president "is the previous year. Experts the candidate that's pushed the pected a rise in the pov- middle class into poverty. We're te for the fourth straight the party of those who want a but unemployment ben- brighter, prosperous future for d modest job gains helped themselves and for their kids. hat off, the bureau report- We're not the party of the rich. last year, the official pov- We're the party of the people ae was an annual income who want to get rich." 021 for a family of four. By total numbers, roughly le unemployment eased 46.2 million people remained from 2010 to 2011, the below the poverty line last year, unchanged from 2010. That fig- ure was the highest in the more than half a century that records have been kept. The 15 percent poverty rate was about the same as it was in 1993 and was the highest since 1983. Broken down by state, New Mexico had the highest share of poor people, at 22.2 percent, according to rough calculations by the Census Bureau. It was followed by Louisiana, the Dis- trict of Columbia, South Caro- lina, Arkansas and Georgia. On the other end of the scale, New Hampshire had the lowest, at 7.6 percent. Bruce D. Meyer, an economist at the University of Chicago, said it was disappointing that pov- erty levels did not improve. He described it as a sign of linger- ing problems in the labor mar- ket, even with recent declines in the unemployment rate. "The drop in the unemployment rate has been due in significant part to workers leaving the labor force, because they are discour- aged, back in school, taking care of family or other reasons," he said. Some economists were just relieved that the poverty level wasn't higher in the struggling economy. A soldier stands guard outside the Jazeera Hotel, the temporary home of Somalia's new president Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, which was hit by two explosions in Mogadishu, Somalia, Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012. New Somali president survives attack on second day in office Two suicide bombers attempt assassaination MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) - Somalia's new president sur- vived an assassination attempt on his second day in office when two suicide bombers blew them- selves up Wednesday while try- ing to gain access into a heavily guarded hotel that is his tempo- rary residence, officials and wit- nesses said. The attack highlights the chal- lenge that insecurity caused by an Islamist insurgency poses to Somalia's fledgling government, which is expected to help trans- form the east African country from being a failed state to one with functioning government. The African Union Mission for Somalia said one of its soldiers was killed when the two suicide attackers attempted to penetrate the Jazeera Hotel where the Pres- ident Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and Kenya s foreign minister were giving a news conference. Three soldiers were wounded in the blast. The two suicide bombers set off explosions after they were shot by soldiers guarding the Jazeera Hotel, while another was intercepted and shot dead as he attempted to scale the walls of the hotel's compound, the Afri- can Union Mission for Somalia, known as Amisom, said in a state- ment. Witnesses say at least one more person was killed, bringing the total death toll to a minimum of five, including the three attack- ers. The president who was elected by Parliament on Monday, was undeterred by the explosions and continued to speak to the media, AMISOM said. Al-Shabab, a radical Islamist militia that is affiliated with al- Qaida and waging an insurgency against the Somali government, quickly claimed responsibil- ity for the attack. Al-Shabab had opposed Mohamud s election, saying it had been manipulated by Western powers. Somali parliamentarians were tasked with electing a president since no election could be held, given the state of security around the country. African Union forces are help- ing the Somali government fight al-Shabab, which the U.S. has designated as terrorist group and which neighboringAfrican coun- tries consider a threat. Police Corp. Yusuf Ali said he was guarding the Somalia immigration department near the Jazeera Hotel when the two blasts occurred. An Associated Press photog- rapher inside the hotel for the president's news conference with Kenyan Foreign Minister Sam Ongeri confirmed the two offi- cials were safe. The photographer said he saw at least five bodies near the gate of the hotel. Witness Mohammed Nuradin confirmed that death toll. President Mohamud has taken up temporary residence at Jazeera Hotel in a highly pro- tected zone near the airport before moving to the presidential palace. During Monday's elec- tion, he defeated Sheik Shariff Sheikh Ahmed who was seeking re-election as president after hav- ing led a transitional government for three years. Somalia has had transitional administrations since 2004. Mohamud, 56, an academic and activist, is expected to form the county's first functioning cen- tral government since 1991, when warlords, overthrew a longtime dictator. JEFF CHIU/AP Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks in front of an image of the iPhone 5 during an Apple event in San Francisco, Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012. Apple unveils thinner iPhone Missouri lawmakers rebut federal contraception mandate in override New phone, iPods to come to U.S. stores next Friday SAN FRANCISCO - For the first time, the iPhone is grow- ing even as it slims down. After sticking for five years to the same screen size, Apple on Wednesday revealed a new phone that's taller, and has a bigger display. The iPhone 5 will go on sale in the U.S. and eight other countries next Friday, Sept.21. Even though it's taller than the iPhone 4S, it's lighter, thanks to a new screen technology that makes the whole phone thinner. The bigger screen - 4 inches measured diagonally - creates room for another row of icons on the screen and lets widescreen movies fit better. The calendar will now show five days at a time instead ofjustthree. Previous iPhone mod- els carried 3.5-inch screens. In another big change, the iPhone 5 will come with the capa- bility to connect to the fastest new wireless data networks in the U.S. and overseas. The improvements mean the iPhone 5 is taking a bigger leap up the evolutionary chain than its predecessor, which wasn't that much different than the iPhone 4. The new device also carries another distinction: It's the first iPhone developed and unveiled since the death of Apple founder Steve Jobs. The iPhone that Jobs had con- ceived ushered in what he billed as "the post-PC era" - a shift that is causing people to rely less on personal computers and more on mobile gadgets they can hold in their hand. Jobs died last October the day after Apple introduced the iPhone 4S, which was the fifth version of Apple's phone. There was little surprise in Wednesday's announcement. Despite the pains the company takes to hide its plans, the rough launch date, the new screen and the capability to connect to so-called LTE networks had been reported for months by blogs and analysts. "There was nothing unexpect- ed in terms of the new features of the iPhone," said Tavis McCourt, an analyst with Raymond James. That's a contrast to last year, when Apple watchers were first surprised by a delay in the launch, and then by the fact that the iPhone 4S didn't offer much new except Siri, a voice-activated assis- tant. The 4S, nevertheless, has been a smash success. During the first nine months that the iPhone 4S was on the market, Apple's rev- enue from iPhones has exceeded $63 billion, helping to establish Apple as the world's most valuable company ever, as measured by its stock price. One thing that did surprise McCourt this year: Apple is launching the phone in so many countries so quickly. On Day One, the phone willbe available in Aus- tralia, Canada, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and the U.K., besides the U.S. A week later, it will go on sale in 22 more countries, including Italy, Poland and Spain. Another surprise about the iPhone 5 is that it's 18 percent thinner than its predecessor. The company was expected to take advantage of any additional space to expand the phone's battery, not make the phone thinner. Apple followed its usual script for the new iPhone's coming-out party. Apple CEO Tim Cook, Jobs' hand-picked successor, kicked off the festivities before an audience of reporters, bloggers, applications developers and specialguestswith a summary of the company's mile- stones. He then handed things over to his top lieutenants, agroup led by marketing chief Philip Schiller and mobile software executive Scott Forstall. It has become such a familiar rit- ual that Cook, Schiller and Forstall all appeared to be wearing the same attire as they did at Apple's last product event in June. Adopt- ing a personal work uniform was something that Jobs embraced. After learning that designer Issey Miyake had made work uniforms for Sony Corp. employees in Japan, Jobs eventually paid Miyake to make him the black mock turtle- necks that became the signature piece of clothing in an ensemble that included jeans and New Bal- ance sneakers. With Jobs gone, the Apple exec- utives left the showmanship to the rock band Foo Fighters, who closed outthetwo-hour presentationwith three songs, including one called "My Hero" dedicated to the com- pany's employees for developing products like thie iPhone 5. It's the year's most antici- pated phone. The number Apple can sell, analysts believe, is lim- ited mostly by the production capacity of its suppliers. There had been concerns that supplies could be tight. Even so, analysts are expecting Apple to sell tens of millions of phones before the year is out, including perhaps as many as 10 million during the last 10 days of this month. Gubenatorial veto overriden in rebuke of Obama policy JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) - Missouri lawmakers enacted new religious exemptions from insurance coverage of birth con- trol Wednesday, overriding a gubernatorial veto and delivering a political rebuke to an Obama administration policy requiring insurers to cover contraception. Although Missouri and 20 other states already had some sort of exemption from contra- ceptive coverage, Missouri's newly expanded law appears to be the first in the nation directly rebutting the federal contracep- tion mandate, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures and supporters of the law. Republican legislative lead- ers barely met the two-thirds majority needed to override the veto by Gov. Jay Nixon. They got help from a few of Nixon's fellow Democrats and ultimate- ly persuaded one particular Republican lawmaker who had opposed the measure to support the override. The Senate vote was 26-6. The House vote was 109-45, the minimum needed for an over- ride. Most provisions of the new law took effect immediately, though some parts won't kick in for another 30 days. Shortly after the vote, an attorney for the Greater Kansas City Coalition of Labor Union Women said it was seeking an. injunction against the measure. Among other things, the suit being filed in Cole County Cir- cuit Court claims the new Mis- souri law conflicts with President Barack Obama's health care law and thus should be struck down. The Missouri measure was championed by the Missouri Catholic Conference, Missouri Right to Life and other religious and anti-abortion groups. Sup- porters said it is meant to register their disapproval of a policy by President Barack Obama's admin- istration that requires insurers to cover birth control at no addition- al cost to women, including those employed by religiously affiliated nonprofits such as hospitals, col- leges or charities. Numerous pending lawsuits claim the federal policy infringes on religious rights, including one filed Wednesday by Christian- oriented Hobby Lobby Stores Inc. "This bill is about protecting our religious liberties. This bill is about protecting businesses from the overreach of govern- ment," said Rep. Sandy Craw- ford, R-Buffalo, who handled the legislation in the House. ROSS SCHOOL OF RUSINES S ~.LURI NTTT Zell Lurie Institute Entrepreneurship Programs Information Session Learn about Start-up Grants ($500-$10,000), Michigan Business Challenge, TechArb Accelerator and more! Today! 9/13, 5:30 PM Ross School of Business R0220 wwIl.bsuic~d