The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 27, 2002 - 7 IAdmiral qt trafficking BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - Rear A Rodrigo Quinones, Colombia's mili attache to Israel, resigned yesterday after officials abcused him of drug trafficking defense minister said. Quinones is the highest-ranking mil official in recent memory to be implicat drug trafficking in Colombia, which prod most of the world's cocaine and most o heroin used in the United States. Quin has also been accused of failing to pr villagers who were massacred in nort Colombia last year by right-wing paramil LABS Continued from Page 1 The incident has prompted the Univer Occupational Safety and Environmental H Department to further review lab safety ands rity procedures. Currently, labs around the University d follow one standard security procedure, O Director Terrance Alexander said. Instead, se ty changes according to how hazardous the stance is, as well as different units within University employ different practices. Alexander said he is working to revise guidelines so that one standard is empli throughout the entire University, though he a that different units would still be able to de from that standard. "As far as individual unit security, it's u them," he said. "We are working on a guid that will provide common sense measures other units can follow across campus. Onc basic measures 'are in place, then each unit take it and build upon it." He added that since none of the substa given to Lexington are rare or hazardous, the} not under the same type of security as o titsamiddrugINVENTION Continued from Page 1 how to spend the $20,000 MagMOON brought him. alle g O n s "I'll spend a certain portion, 10 percent, on improving my life - going on trips, buying a better computer or bike," he said. Adm. gunmen, when Quinones was stationed in the "I also want to keep 80 to 90 percent in the tary region. bank in case I want to pursue commercial- ization or if I need to file for a full patent." During his time at the University, chem- istry Prof. Raoul Kopelman supervised Anker's project. "I'm extremely proud. It's the best thing when your students get the best," Kopel- man said. "There's an old quote from a wise Jewish rabbi - 'I learned a lot from my teachers, a lot from my colleagues and most of all from my students."' The Collegiate Inventors Competition was introduced as a component of the National Inventors Hall in 1990. More than 200 entries were received for this year before 16 finalists were selected. Other winners include Saul Griffith from theMassachusetts Institute of Technology, Yu Huang from Harvard University and Zachary Knight from the University of California at San Francisco. U.S. The State Department last week announced , the it had revoked Quinones' U.S. visa because of his alleged involvement in drug trafficking. itary "The resignation was accepted by the ed in national government taking into account the uces need to preserve our military institutions and f the assure the country ... that the members of the ones security forces are above any stain," Defense otect Minister Martha Lucia Ramirez told a news hern conference. She did not directly refer to the itary drug allegations. chemicals, such as radioisotopes, which require specific authorization and identification in order to obtain them. sity's Even when combined with each other, "the ealth three things that he did receive are not explo- secu- sives," Alexander said. Magnesium sulfate is commonly referred to as o not Epsom salts, which are commonly used to relax SEH muscles. Zinc sulfate is a colorless and transparent curi- water soluble substance commonly used in fertiliz- sub- ers, leather preservatives and agricultural sprays n the and as a medicine that constricts body tissues. There are several kinds of bisulfite substances, e the including ammonium bisulfite and sodium bisul- oyed fite. Most bisulfites are used as food preserva- dded tives, Alexander said. viate Ammonium nitrate is also primarily used as a fertilizer, but according to the United States Envi- up to ronmental Protection Agency, can be used as an eline explosive when mixed with other chemicals that under certain conditions. The EPA produced a e the chemical safety alert for the substance in 1997. I can Potassium permanganate is commonly used as a disinfectant. nces Lexington is currently being held on a $50,000 y are bond, Brown said. His preliminary hearing is other scheduled for Dec. 4. WEAPONS Continued from Page 1 Saddam Hussein will have to figure out exactly what zero tolerance means." The monitors are back after a four-year break under a new mandate from the U.N. Security Council to test the Baghdad govern- ment's contention that it has no arsenals of weapons of mass destruction, or programs to build them. Earlier teams of U.N. experts, in seven years' work ending in 1998, destroyed large amounts of chemical and biological arma- ments and longer-range missiles forbidden to Iraq by U.N. resolutions after the Gulf War, in which an.Iraqi invasion force was driven from Kuwait. The inspectors also dismantled Iraq's nuclear weapons program before it could build a bomb. Chief U.N. inspector Hans Blix says, how- ever, it's "an open question" whether the Iraqis retained some weapons - especially chemical. British and U.S. leaders say they're sure Iraq has such arms, and suspect it also is rebuilding production programs. A working group of 17 inspectors land- ed in Baghdad on Monday, the first contin- gent of some 100 who will be operating in Iraq at any one time by year's end. More than 300 experts are available on the ros- ters of the two U.N. inspecting agencies - the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency, 'or IAEA, and Blix's New York-based U.N. Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission, or UNMOVIC. The two local operational chiefs met with reporters in Baghdad yesterday, and said they have clear - if secret - game plans for the months ahead. "We are fully conscious of the responsi- bility we have on our shoulders," said Jacques Baute of the nuclear watchdog agency. Demetrius Perricos, the UNMOVIC team leader, was asked whether the arms monitors will look for suspected truck-borne biological weapons laboratories. A recent U.S. intelli- gence report said an Iraqi document indicated Baghdad "was interested in developing mobile fermentation units" for biological weapons. This is "not something we find incredible," Perricos said. "We have some plans," he said. He noted inspectors have the right to stop suspect vehi- cles on Iraqi roads, but he wouldn't discuss the plans further. As for possible buried storage or produc- tion sites, "we have a strategy for under- ground facilities" using ground-penetrating radar, Perricos said. Building a nuclear bomb requires a huge infrastructure, and the IAEA inspectors of the 1990s were able to find and destroy that Iraqi technology. Now, said agency spokeswoman Melissa Fleming, "we'll be looking for signs of renewed nuclear activity in any way, shape or form." The U.N. inspectors are to report to the Security Council by late January on their ini- tial round of inspections, including whether the Iraqis have been fully cooperative. The council has warned of "serious conse- quences" for Iraq if the Baghdad government is found in major violation of the U.N. disar- mament demands. Bush has threatened mili- tary action against Iraq in that case, with or without U.N. sanction. Iraq must submit a declaration by Dec. 8 detailing any such weapons programs, as well as nuclear, chemical or biological programs it claims have peaceful purposes. The Iraqis complain that this is too sweeping, encom- passing even plastic slippers, produced by its petrochemical industry. If the inspectors eventually certify that Iraq has cooperated fully with their disar- mament work, U.N. resolutions provide for the lifting of international economic sanc- tions imposed on Iraq after it invaded Kuwait in 1990. The inspections were suspended in 1998 amid disputes over U.N. access to Iraqi sites and Iraqi complaints of American spying via the U.N. operation. The U.N. teams say they now are interested in up to 900 Iraqi sites. They're expected to focus first on sites surveyed in the 1990s, to check on cameras and other equipment left behind to monitor activity. Later, they're expected to branch out to new sites - for example, suspected storage places for chemi- cal weapons U.S. intelligence alleges are still held by Iraq. On the eve of the first inspection, Iraq's official news agency reported that Iraqi air defense batteries fired yesterday at Ameri- can and British warplanes that carried dozens of sorties in the northern and south- ern "no-fly zones," which were established to protect Kurds and Shiite Muslims from Iraqi forces. the michigan daily START WITH BUSJLAW/ENG. Schools, !!!OFFICE PERSON: P/T: 10-15 hrs./wk.; HOLIDAYHELP BEFOREYOU SPRING BREAK,E-BREAK! spacious 4 bdrm. study, living, dining rm., 1 flex. schedule, pleasant environment; mgmt. $1725 base/appt. 1-5 week work program. The on-line authority for Spring Break 2003! 1/2 baths., prkg., ldry. incl. $1950. 973-2349. skills & resume building; downtown Ann Ar- Apply now, start after finals. 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