Weaths~r Tuesday January 28, 2003 ©2003 The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXI I, No. 82 One-hundred-twelve years of editorialfreedom LiG thr iroughout the ay and intoh 30 west at nine miles per hour. Tomorrow: www.michigandaily.com - -------------- - ----------------------------- Inspectors dissatisfied with Iraq's defiance, UNITED NATIONS (AP) - U.N. weapons inspectors bolstered the Unit- ed States' case yesterday that Iraq has failed to cooperate with them whole- heartedly, but also called for at least a "few months" to give the process time to avert a war. The presentations to the U.N. Securi- ty Council, 60 days after inspections resumed following a four-year break, left the five veto-wielding members divided on how much more time Bagh- dad should be given to disarm. As the Pentagon pushed ahead with war preparations, Secretary of State * Colin Powell warned that Saddam Hus- sein has "not much more time" to com- ply and suggested the next step by Washington could come as soon as next week. But China, Russia and France, which have said they currently see no cause for war, countered that yesterday's reports support the need for inspectors to continue to do their work. In his toughest criticism yet, chief inspector Hans Blix charged that Iraq has never genuinely accepted U.N. res- olutions demanding its disarmament and warned that "cooperation on sub- stance" is "indispensable" for a peace- ful solution. "Iraq appears not to have come to a genuine acceptance, not even today, of the disarmament that was demanded of it," Blix told the council. Speaking next, Mohamed ElBaradei, who heads the U.N. nuclear control agency, said inspections of 106 sites had turned up no evidence so far that Iraq was reviving its nuclear program. With Iraq's cooperation, he said, "we should be able within the next few months to provide credible assurance that Iraq has no nuclear weapons pro- grams." "These few months would be a valuable investment in peace because it could help avoid a war," ElBaradei said. Iraqi Ambassador Mohammed al- Douri insisted his country "has actively cooperated" and "has expressed its sin-I cere willingness to clarify any ques- tions." Iraq also sent a 10-page letter to the United Nations defending its coop- eration. "We open all doors to Mr. Blix and his team. If there.is something, he will find it. We have no hidden reports at all," al-Douri said. The inspection reports came as Pres- ident Bush planned to outline his case for possible war against Iraq in tonight's State of the Union address. FBI task force's info probe tracks student activity While the FBI does not track all University events, it has access to student information By Carmen Johnson Daily Staff Reporter Some students are wondering how much privacy they still have now that Joint Terrorism Task Forces overseeing counterterrorism include collegiate police officers on a dozen campuses. Paying atten- tion to college campuses and working with campus police to check any tips or leads is one way federal agencies have been monitoring potential terrorist threats. The Department of Public Safety regularly works and exchanges information with the FBI on differ- ent security issues like the ban on flyovers over the Michigan Stadium, said DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown. "Only if any of the law-enforcing agencies, like the FBI, received a credible tip about an issue on campus, that would be investigated," Brown said. "However the FBI could find out public informa- tid like details on the (University) directory." Coastersh However, students and faculty are weary of zeal- ous federal agencies after the USA Patriot Act was passed in October 2001, which took away signifi- cant privacy protections from students, said Noel Saleh, staff attorney of the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigap. "The FBI could really find out anything they wanted," Saleh said. "They are interested in student activists or organizers. Like the divestment confer- ence that happened late last year was an interest to the FBI." Prior to the Patriot Act, the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 stated that, unless the school had been mandated by court order or subpoena, an academic institution was generally barred from releasing a student's education records without a student's consent. "Now, students would never know what files fed- eral agencies have or how it will be used," Saleh said. "Before the Patriot Act, students had consent." But FBI agent Greg Stejskal said unless there is some reason for investigation on campus, the feder- al law and the Constitution still protect the rights of citizens. "We don't monitor demonstrations or guest See FBI, Page 2 cip cutail date rape incidents JOHN PRATT/Daily Icicles form on nearby tree branches as an Ann Arbor firefighter puts out the remainder of a fire that occurred at an apartment complex on the corner of Ann and Division streets yesterday. Ann- Streetfredamages 15 student apart ments By Elizabeth Anderson Daily Staff Reporter A new consumer product has made date-rape drugs less threatening to American women but has gone largely unnoticed by the University and Ann Arbor communities. The Drink Safe Coaster, created by Drink Safe Technologies, Inc., can detect if GHB, Ketamine or other common date rape drugs have contaminated beverages. The coaster indicates ime of six date-rape drugs is present in any beverage by 'changing color to bright blue when a drop of the beverage is dotted onto it. Organizations such as the YWCA and rape crisis centers around the country have been handing out the coasters since October. "They have real value," said Sandy Davis, Rape Crisis Center director for the Santa Clara, Calif. YWCA. "We just stumbled across a web- site of the manufacturer. I think they'll be very available and I think the really savvy bars are going to have them." Each coaster has two testing areas and a suggested individual retail price of 75 to 95 cents, said Drink Safe Distributors Director John Allison. "I've had many phone calls from universities on how to get the product," Allison said. ''But the product is so new, that's why no one's heard of it." Neither Kent Baumkel, Ann Arbor Police Department personal safety coordinator, nor Therese Doud, Advocacy Services coordinator for the Sexual Assault Crisis Center of Washte- naw County, had heard of the Drink Safe Coast- er. But both expressed positive reactions to the coasters and a desire to see them implemented in University settings. When asked about marketing strategies, Drink Safe Technologies Vice President Mike Giles said many colleges and universities have placed orders for the coasters. "Our main thrust has been trying to get it into your local drugstores and convenience stores," Giles said. "The product hasn't been out that long, but it threw a slew of colleges and univer- sities towards us - one of the bigger clienteles that came on board initially." Initially, Drink Safe Technologies pitched the Drink Safe Coasters to alcohol companies such as Bacardi and Anheuser-Busch, said Drink Safe Technologies Scientific Coordinator Brian Glover. See COASTERS, Page 3 By Maria Sprow Daily Staff Reporter The historical three-story, yellow home-turned- apartment complex located on the northeast cor- ner of East Ann and North Division streets went up in smoke yesterday, leaving at least one resi- dent temporarily homeless and a dozen others liv- ing with family and friends. Firefighters first received the call that the 15- unit building - which has two addresses, at 208 N. Division St. and 499 E. Ann St. - was on fire at about 11:20 a.m., said Ann Arbor Fire Depart- ment First Battalion Chief Louis Johnson. In addition to the fire damage done to the building's interior, witnesses said several of the windows were shattered and the roof over the addition was destroyed. "When I looked outside around 11 or 11:30 there were two or three fire trucks behind the house, and two more on Ann and there was a Red Cross emergency vehicle. I could see the house and I could see the smoke," said LSA senior Sarah Ensor, who lives next door to the burned home. "The addition seems to be almost entirely See FIRE, Page 2 'U' group aids health care in.Bangladesh By Bron Daniels For the Daily FRANK PAYNE/Daily Ashleigh Banfield, who reported on the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks and the war in Afghanistan, speaks yesterday about her experiences. sS ' Panel of journali1sts disculss war CO-verage Amid the festering heat, the putrid stench of fecal decay is evident as sanitation sludge fuses into the water supply. Widespread unsanitary condi- tions are pervasive in this environ- ment. Bangladesh's health care system has plummeted into a degener- ative state, Alex Crawford, Michigan International Development Program spokesman said. Doctors are known to perform numerous Caesarian births a day with the same set of instruments and dentists have performed appen- dectomies. The Michigan International Devel- opment Program, a non-profit group of current and former University stu- dents, runs a program pioneering gains for Bangladeshi garment workers to provide them with health care. Business Prof. Andrew Crawford, founded the program in Oct. 2001 before he died of leukemia. Crawford received no treatment for his disease, his son Alex said, choosing to make a point by channeling the money into the Bangladesh program instead. . "One life is not as valuable as the many others one could save," Alex said. "Professor Crawford's treatment cost ... totaling as much as $150,000, ensured that more than 10,000 Bangladeshi garment workers received health care for a year's time," Alex added. The students have traveled for the past year, approaching business owners to implement the health care services. The students deal directly with owners of manufacturing facilities to convince them of the need for better care, LSA senior and MIDP volunteer Rowtulo Adebiyi said. "It is crucial that the owner of the factories understand the grave benefits that health care will provide by invest- ing in their employees that increases output and quality of production," Adebiyi said. The results from the ini- tial pilot project stand resolute as testa- ment to the program's success, he added. "We are getting it done with market- driven solutions to curtail these prob- lems. Our program has shown savings to the owner up 1000 percent and to the worker up well over 500 percent," Crawford said. Only six months after the program's establishment, all operations are over- whelmingly designed, run and institut- ed by a small and determined nucleus of students. The students' goal is to connect doctors in the region with fac- tory workers to ensure adequate health service. The group should be a model to other students groups looking to make change, said MIDP Chairman See MIDP, Page 3 By Nedda Mehdlzadsh For the Daily A panel of speakers, including nationally-recognized journalists and experts, traveled from different corners of the country, to discus their opinions and concerns on the impending war and biological warfare yesterday at the University Alumni Center. Despite their differing views, all panelists agreed on the importance of public understanding and awareness of the current political climate. The Knight-Wallace Fellows and W.K. Kellogg Foundation created an opportunity for the guests to speak with each other and also to address some concerns and questions from the audi- ence. The main theme, however, revolved around one major issue: How well is the public being informed during this time of crisis and are the media and experts prepared to inform it? "A journalist is a member of society See JOURNALISTS, Page 2 JONATHON TREISTDaily Eastern Michigan University senior Karen Reaume does some routine bulb maintenance at Tanfastic on Plymouth Road. I 6