news@michigandaily.com NEWS The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 12, 2004 - 3A CRIIVIE Student arrested for stalking Department of Public Safety reports show on Tuesday morning a student was arrested for aggravated stalking. The case is currently pending further investigation. two arrested for possessing marijuana in car The Department of Public Safety arrested two people affiliated with the University Monday night after investi- gating a suspicious vehicle and discov- ering marijuana. At the time of the arrest, the vehicle was located in the Hubbard Road parking lot. The two were not issued a citation, but the case is pending further investigation and will possibly be taken to the prosecu- tor's office. Flood causes thousands of dollars in damage Chelsea Family Practice, a medical -acility located on Main Street, received .more than $40,000 in damage after water flooded the building due to a bro- ken sprinkler head. The incident was reported to DPS Monday afternoon. Disposed match ignites blaze in Dentistry School A small fire was started Tuesday in the School of Dentistry after a student lit a match to light a Bunsen burner. ,Upon discarding the match in a trash container, a small fire started. Students were able to put out the fire in the lab- oratory before DPS arrived. The fire caused no damage to the laboratory. Researcher faints during laboratory experiment A person affiliated with the Uni- versity passed out while working on an experiment in the Industrial Oper- ations building Monday morning. ,DPS was notified and Huron Valley Ambulance was called, but the sub- ject refused treatment. The injury was related to the lab work being conducted, possibly from an acciden- tal inhalation of fumes. Suspect steals r from hospital DPS units responded to University ,Hospital staff reports that a subject had stolen several items from the hospital. The items were not of high value and .there are no suspects in the case, but investigation is ongoing. Ambulance yequested after 1 seizure at Union DPS reports indicate that an *ambulance was requested for a per- son who suffered a seizure while in the Michigan Union. The Union manager made the request for an ambulance Sunday evening. Student suffers :pye injury due to detergent run-in A resident of Vera Baits Resi- dence Hall was escorted to the Uni- versity Hospital emergency room after getting detergent in their eye. DPS was notified of the incident Sunday evening. Thief snatches license plate from student's car A student reported to DPS that someone stole their license plate late Sunday night. The plate was stolen from a vehicle parked near Yost Ice Arena. DPS currently has no suspects in the case. Money, cell phone, purse stolen at University hospital A subject not affiliated with the University reported to DPS Monday that a purse was stolen, including $30 and a cellular phone, from the University Hospital. The purse was left unattended in the hospital, and there are no suspects in the situation. Bush calls for no new nuclear countries WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush, pointing to a black-market weapons network led by the father of Pakistan's nuclear bomb, said yesterday that no new countries should have the ability to enrich or process nuclear material. He argued that international efforts to combat the spread of weapons of mass destruction have been neither broad nor effective enough and require tougher action from all nations. "The greatest threat before humanity today is the possibility of secret and sudden attack with chemical or biological or radiological or nuclear weapons," Bush said. "We must confront the danger with open eyes and unbending purpose," he said in a speech at the National Defense University. "I've made clear to all the policy of this nation: America will not per- mit the terrorists and dangerous regimes to threat- en us with the world's most dangerous weapons." His call to prevent countries from acquiring the equipment and technology to enrich uranium and reprocess spent fuel for plutonium - even if the stated intent is to build civilian power facilities - was likely to anger Iran and North Korea and the countries that have supplied them. Bush for the first time publicly accused Pak- istani scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan's network of supplying to North Korea the centrifuge technolo- gy that is needed to make highly enriched uranium for nuclear weapons. The administration previous- ly had said that it believed Khan's network was supplying weapons technology to North Korea, Libya and Iran but had not specified what. The administration and North Korea are locked in a dispute over whether the Koreans are trying to develop nuclear weapons using highly enriched uranium. North Korea has acknowledged building nuclear weapons using plutonium but denies it is trying to build a weapon with highly enriched uranium - a key dispute as the two nations head into talks later this month with four other coun- tries, including China. With the president still being criticized over whether Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruc- tion, he also used the speech to outline the role that good U.S. intelligence has played in the ongoing dismantlement of Khan's network, as well as Libya's commitment last December to give up its weapons of mass destruction programs. He gave much of the credit for Pakistani Presi- dent Pervez Musharraf's action against Khan to the groundwork laid over several years by U.S. intelligence. Bush singled out the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog organization, the International Atomic Energy Agency, for criticism, calling for the creation of a special committee to focus on safeguards and verification and to ensure that nations comply with international obligations. 'Me greatest threat before humanity today is the possibility of secret and sudden attack with chemical or biological or radiological or nuclear weapons:' - President Bush He also complained that nations such as Iran; which has been under investigation for prolifera- tion, have been allowed to sit on the IAEA board of governors. "Those actively breaking the rules. should not be entrusted with enforcing the rules' the president said. SEC moves to ban payments inducing brokers to sell funds Watery work WASHINGTON (AP)--Federal reg- shares ulators are moving closer to banning abuse"i payments by mutual fund companies to William induce brokers to sell certain funds - a Thep practice that critics say creates conflicts bling, h of interest and hurts investors. hiddenf The Securities and Exchange Com- Und mission also voted yesterday to adopt reaching new rules requiring funds to provide one is g investors a twice-yearly "shareholder Thep report" with fuller information on fees public c and expenses. The report will include adopted the dollar amount of fund expenses ward. TI paid by shareholders on a $1,000 investor investment. fees the The SEC, which has been making a well ast series of changes in rules governing charged the mutual fund industry, is promising Roye, h that dramatic reforms protecting oversee investors from abuses will be in place Alsot by early summer. panies The agency has been under pressure investor from investor advocates and lawmak- ter abo ers who are pushing legislation to over- invest in haul the fund industry amid growing Newl evidence that ordinary shareholders are also wo hurt by trading and marketing abuses. incenti "It has become painfully clear that other in the practice of directing ... (fund changin money) to a broker or dealer as com- nies co pensation for distribution of the fund's and thel HOUSING Continued from Page 1A During the meeting, students came up with a list of housing goals and concerns to address. The list included devising a housing seal of approval that could be used to distin- guish University-approved buildings, creating better student relations with neighborhood associations and looking to other universities to find model housing situations. A student- presents opportunities for in recent years, SEC Chairman Donaldson said. practice is all the more trou- pe said, "because its impact is from investors." erscoring the proposal's far- g impact, Donaldson said, "This oing to hit them where it hurts." proposal will be submitted for comment for 60 days and likely by the agency sometime after- he new disclosure will "enable rs to determine the amount of ey paid on an ongoing basis, as to compare the amount of fees d by other funds," said Paul head of the SEC division that s the mutual fund industry. under the new rules, fund com- will be required to give rs more information every quar- ut the stocks that the funds n. legislation by several senators uld outlaw the practice of fund ve payments to brokers and ndustry practices, significantly g the way mutual fund compa- nduct business with investors brokers who sell them funds. Researchers Hans VanSummeren and Joe Krasny run tests on a liquefied natural gas carrier for Exxon-Mobil in the Marine Hydrodynamics Laboratory yesterday. led community clean-up day was also sug- gested as a way to show students' respect for their surroundings. "It's the community of the students as a whole saying we are going to have this clean-up day and we are going to have a voice;" Woll said., Students who were present at the meeting will contribute to and revise the list. These concerns will eventually be presented at a City Council meeting as a representation of student's needs in regards to housing. "My immediate goal is to bring our summarized list of concrete goals from students' perspectives to show City Council that we met and organized, and want a working relationship," Woll said. The town hall meeting was student-led and sponsored by student groups-that reach out to Ann Arbor organizations not affiliated with the University. "The meeting is primarily sponsored by MSA. ... We're in charge of lobbying with organizations outside of the University," Counihan said. Woll emphasized the importance of gaining: respect from City Council members and commu-a nity neighbors, in order to create an environment where students can voice housing concerns. "We want to show that we are ready to take a step to be part of a respectful community and have this respect reciprocated," Woll said. "Thek purpose of this forum was for students to prove to the community at large, including the University and student council, that we have these concerns." COMEPRfTE FOR THE D ALY! 763-2459* Correction: A headline on Page 2 of Tuesday's Daily should have said two U.S. soldiers were killed while disposing of explosives. Please report any errors in the Daily to corrections@michigandaily.com I. I the daily -mens a Puzzle The Prneton Review 1-800-2-REVIEW We're concerned. Last year's winner for Best Slang was hella. Whatever happened to sketchy? Or even tubular? Just wond ering. dd- l AL dd- fthL AIL