1iE £EidEHan &AIjFj ON I-I 1'I~ )1111)-'1EN FrY- IIl{EIEYI ARS OF EDIT ORIAL FEI LEDO Ann Arbor, Michigan ., w- - ,, f _- --.'S Y- - X41 =.S-. .: -:. ..,: :. .; '. . ., .. :.._, .. t.- : . 1. . of ., ,. .3 :.: 'r- . '.- r. . ... e ..a +'i ,,.. _ .. ,,; y-._. e...r < ,h. !5 , . ny?~_c M + , ... .kAx, r+'i ....uh3.. ny .., a..u.: H3k..Yn ... ......r . ti:.Y.+., Y:: .vf e r rt'.+,S7 u , f':i_ x -1:: . ,, a x_. _sqi .vrr'r.. .: "a r' 3 ; . ..x Y .:"k;' _, r .i ;. r ._, ,'.' Friday, October19, 2012 michigandaily.com CAMPAIGN FINANCE GOP Super PAC to air ads in Mich. Restore our - which Kall deemed a turning point in the election - races in Future to spend statesthat were previouslynon, competitive, including Penn- $12 million across sylvania and Michigan, have become more contested. nine swing states Obama led by six points in Colorado prior to the Denver By ANDREW SCHULMAN debate, but a Public Policy Poll- Daily Staff Repoter ing survey released Thursday indicates his lead has shrunk to Weeks after withdrawing three points. Meanwhile, polls television advertisements from in Florida have shown Romney the Michigan airways, the pro- leading by as many as seven Romney Super PAC Restore our points. Future announced Thursday On Thursday,in what appears that it will reinstate its adver- to be a sign of confidence, the tisements beginning next week. Romney campaign diverted The advertisement purchase resources from North Caro- which is part of a $12-mil- lina, where Romney and Obama lion expenditure in nine battle- have been evenly matched, to ground states - is one of the states like Ohio, according to most extensive advertising the Raleigh, N.C.-based News campaigns for Republican pres- and Observer. idential nominee Mitt Romney Political Science Prof. thus far, The New York Times Michael Heaney said the reported. Super PAC's ad purchase was a The push could give Romney response to fluctuating support, an advantage in crucial swing in which more battleground states, including Ohio, Florida states are "within competitive and Colorado, where he has range" for Romney. seen significant gains in the "The electoral map has really polls since the first presidential changed," Heaney said. "States debate in Denver two wdeks that were considered out of ago. reach for Romney are, all of a It could also offer Rom- sudden, nowwithin reach." ney, who led President Barack The states Heaney said are Obama by seven points in a winnable for Romney include Gallup poll released Thursday, Colorado, Ohio, Wisconsin, a broader path through the Iowa and Virginia, all of which Electoral College to the White are among the nine states the House, according to Aaron Kall, advertisements will target. the director of the University's The $12-million expenditure debate program. consists of $1 million for Wis- "That path is very narrdw consin and Iowa, $2.3 million for Gov. Romney for that magic for Florida and $2.5 million for number of 270, so putting more Ohio, according to the Times. states on the table will certainly The report did not include the increase the chance ofgetting to amount of funding that will be that number," Kall said. allocated to Michigan ads. In the aftermath of Romney's The race in Michigan has performance in the first debate See SUPER PAC, Page 3 ELECTION 2012 In Ohio, Bruce, Clinton rally for Obama Campaign hopes Springsteen will appeal to working- class voters By JOSEPH LICHTERMAN Editor in Chief PARMA, Ohio - Bruce Springsteen planned to sit this election cycle out, but when President Barack Obama called him asking to write a song for his re-election campaign, the Boss couldn't say no. "He called me a few weeks # ago and said, 'Bruce, I don't have a campaign song,"' Spring- steen said at an Obama cam- paign event on Thursday, where he performed after a speech by former President Bill Clinton. "'There's a country guy who wrote a song about Mitt Rom- ney. There's a song gap. I need something." Springsteen, of course, was joking, and after campaigning for John Kerry in 2004 and for Obama in 2008, the musician had said repeatedly in the lead up to the 2012 election that he wasn't planning on publicly sup- porting a candidate. But as polls show a tighten- ing race between Obama and Republican presidential nomi- nee Mitt Romney, Springsteen decided to lend his support to the President's re-election efforts, performing in Ohio before traveling to Iowa for another concert Thursday after- See BRUCE, Page 3 PATRICK BARRON/Daily U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) discusses women's rights in the Michigan Union on ThursdayA State, nat'l offi cials, laud women s righS In campaign (D-Mich.) and other promi- equality and urged political nent Michigan Democrats in activism while expressing their event, panel shows the Michigan Union on Thurs- support for President Barack day to campaign for President Obama and his stance on social support for Obama Barack Obama and Staben- issue . ow's re-election efforts, while Aside from Stabenow and By DANIELLE emphasizing the importance of Richards, the panel also includ- RAYKHINSHTEYN women's issues amid an election ed State Sen. Rebekah War- Daily StaffReporter cycle rife with controversy over ren (D-Ann Arbor) and Debbie issues such as rape and contra- Dingell, wife of U.S. Rep. John Planned Parenthood presi- ception. Dingell (D-Mich.) and was dent Cecile Richards joined Each woman stressed the hosted by Organizing for Amer- U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow importance of health care See RIGHTS, Page 7 GO BLUE, BEAT MSU STATE BALLOT PROPOSALS Prop. 3 focuses on energy Voters to determine opportunityto decide to institute of their services from renew- environmental policy in the state able sources by 2025, while rais- how state uses constitution, an effort that no ing the costs to consumers by no other state has undertaken. more than 1 percent. renewable energy Proposal 3 - officially titled Michigan already currently Michigan Energy, Michigan a Renewable Portfolio Standard By TUI RADEMAKER Jobs - which would expand the in place as a result of the Clean, Daily StaffReporter state's efforts in renewable ener- Renewable and Efficient Energy gy, has power companies and Act of 2008, which requires 10 In the third of six ballot pro- environmental groups divided. If percent of energy output to be posals Michigan voters will face passed, energy companies would produced from renewable sourc- on Nov. 6, voters will have the be required to provide 25 percent See ENERGY, Page 7 CAMPUS EVENTS Panel weighs impact of Fisher Experts consider U.S. Supreme Court case, the student, who was denied admis- University is capitalizing on the sion to the University of Texas, merits of race- potentially precedent-setting which uses race as a factor in court decision to talk about the admissions. based admissions importance of affirmative action If the Supreme Court rules at public universities. in favor of Fisher, it could over- By MOLLY BLOCK On Thursday, the National turn the decision of Grutter v. Daily Staff Reporter Center for Institutional Diver- Bollinger, a 2003 case involving sity hosted a symposium in the the University of Michigan Law In the wake of last Wednes- Rogel Ballroom at the Michigan School'that affirmed the legality day's oral arguments in the Union to discuss the case, which of affirmative action policies at Fisher v. University of Texas involves Abigail Fisher, a white See PANEL, Page 3 tINKIKKLAND/Uaily Senior quarterback Denard Robinson and other students gather on the Qiag for the Go Blue Beat MSU pep rallyto rev up the student body before Saturday's game against Michigan State at the Big House. WEATHER H1; 57 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail DPS to hold fourth public crime meeting TOMORROW LO: 41 news@michigandaily.com and let us know. 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