news@michigandaily.com NEWS The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 30, 2004 - 3 Students start up online auction sites City officials, 'U' profs to discuss urban sprawl The Michigan Student Assembly's Environmental Issues Commission will sponsor a panel on urban sprawl today at 7:30 p.m. in the Michigan Union Ballroom. The title of the discussion is "Sprawled Out." The panelists will dis- cuss the fight against urban sprawl statewide and locally. Panelists will include Mayor John Hieftje, City Council member Jean Carlberg, history Prof. Matt Lassiter, law Prof. Rick Hills and Conan Smith, land programs director of the Michigan Environmental Council and chair of the Cool Cities Task Force. Co-sponsors include Students for Public Interest Research Group in Michigan and the Urban Issues Collaborative. Forum will address war on terrorism Victor Bernson, legislative counsel for U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, and Special Operator Michael McGann, who recently returned from Afghanistan, will speak today at 8 p.m. in the Michigan Room of the Michigan League. The event, sponsored by the Univer- sity of Michigan Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, is part of an open forum on the war on terrorism. Bernson and McGann will discuss the U.S. strategy in fighting terrorism and give first-hand perspectives on opera- tions. A question-and-answer session will follow the forum. Physics department to host Nobel laureate speaker Nobel Prize winner Robert Laughlin will speak tomorrow at 4:15 p.m. in room 1324 of East Hall. Presented by the Department of Physics, the event is part of the fourth annual Ford Motor Co. Distinguished Lecture in Physics. The title of Laughlin's speech is "The Emergent Age." Laughlin is the physics Nobel laure- ate at Stanford University. He won the Nobel Prize in 1998 for his discovery of a new form of quantum fluid related to the fluids that occur in superconduc- tivity and in liquid helium. Australian prof to discuss 10 rules of city sustainability Murdoch University city policy Prof. and Australian Peter Newman will speak as part of the Third Annual Peter M. Wege Lecture tomorrow at 4 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. The title of the lecture is "Cities as Sustain- able Ecosystems" The lecture focuses on the United Nations Environment Program's 10 principles of how to build more sus- tainable cities. The principles are fur- ther explained in Newman's recently published book, which uses case stud- ies from around the world. Activist will lecture on challenge of animal rights Author Tom Regan will lecture on animal rights at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Michigan League Ballroom. Michigan State University Prof. David Favre from the Animal Legal and Historical Center will introduce Regan. The Michigan Animal Rights Society is hosting the event. A book signing will follow the lecture. Regan is a professor emeritus of philosophy at North Carolina State University. His most recent book, "Empty Cages: Facing the Challenge of Animal Rights" has been nominat- ed for a Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award. Campus, state groups celebrate Earth Day Fifteen campus and state groups will speak about environmental problems and their solutions tomorrow from 10 am. to 4 p.m. on the Diag as part of National Earth Day and as part of Earth Week at the University. The event will include raffle drawings and food. Conference to examine history of Armenian church The Armenian Studies Program will host a three-day international conference on the history of the By Victoria Edwards Daily Staff Reporter With the high price of books and the long lines at conventional stores, students are being offered more up-and-coming venues where they can buy and sell not only books, but also football tickets and sublets. University alum Zach Price started the auction website TheDiag.com this week, in response to demand for a venue to advertise products for stu- dents that were not being auctioned elsewhere. The website functions similarly to eBay, and students can post bids and purchase items ranging from computers to furniture to CDs after register- ing with the site. "Ever since I came to U of M, I was amazed at the high demand for sublets, football tickets, parking spots and used textbooks," Price said. Price got the idea to start a website to help stu- dents with these things four years ago, but said he never had the resources or time to really pursue it - until now. Price is not the only one who will be compet- ing with conventional stores by offering products to students online. LSA junior Johnny Glase said his friend Scott Palko, a University of Notre Dame alum, started a website at Notre Dame that was very successful and planned to bring a similar one to the University. Glase said he took up Palko's offer, and the website UMtoday.com, which was started in December 2003, now has a couple hundred users. One of the site's features is an online market- place, where students can bid on furniture, books and electronics. Glase said he is now actively publicizing the website, which is 100 users short of attracting advertising contracts. Palko, who bought the company and then start- ed it at the University, said although the company has not made a profit at the University yet, he expects lucrative results in the fall. Although Glase said he and Palko are waiting for more advertisers before offering a link to MEBay.com - an auction-type service for Uni- versity students - the mementos of student life on the website are attracting users. Students' response to the different online ven- ues has been mixed. LSA sophomore Erin Luyendyk said she doesn't use either site. "I just never got into (buying online), I guess. My brother shopped online but someone got ahold of his credit-card number and bought something," Luyendyk said. Although there are risks involved in buying online, engineering junior Steve Bammert said he would participate in online auctions. "Ever since I came to U of M, Iwasamazedatthehigh demand for sublets, football tickets, parking spots and used textbooks:' - Zach Price University alum "I think students need a website like that. At the end of the year, there are TVs and futons that stu- dents need to get rid of, and there is not really a place do that besides the classifieds,' Bammert said. He added that he already frequents Glase's site and is looking forward to auctions that will be featured in it. Pakistan: Al-Qaida intelligence chief killed A Pakistani soldier mans a position alonga road near Wana In South Warzistan yesterday. An al-Qaida Intelligence chief was killed in Pakistan's massive sweep through western tribal areas to root out members of Osama bin Laden's terror network and the Taliban, a military official said. WANA, Pakistan (AP) - An al- Qaida intelligence chief was killed in Pakistan's massive military sweep through western tribal areas to root out members of Osama bin Laden's terror network and the Taliban, a mil- itary official said yesterday. Army spokesman Maj. Gen. Shaukat Sultan identified the intelli- gence chief only as Abdullah. When pressed for details, includ- ing Abdullah's full name and nation- ality, Sultan said he had no more information. The military declared the opera- tion in South Waziristan province over on Sunda, and claimed it was a success. Some 167 suspects were arrested, but hundreds of other militants are still at large. Uzbek terrorist leader Tahir Yuldash was reportedly wound- ed in the assault but escaped. Sultan said the army had con- firmed Abdullah's death through "independent intelligence sources" but would not say if it had his body. Abdullah is a common name in the Islamic world, and it was impossible to know which of the many al-Qaida and other terror suspects Sultan might be referring to. Sultan said that 63 militants were killed in the operation, and 167 arrested. Security officials had said Uzbeks, Chechens and Arabs were among them. He said 46 troops were killed and 26 injured. Villagers have begun returning to their homes after seeking shelter in Wana and other villages during the operation, when thousands of Pak- istani forces battled hundreds of for- eign and local militants. AP PHOTO STUDENTS Continued from Page 1. services. RC senior Erik Glenn voiced SVA's request that the University retain an Education Affairs Coordinator in the Office of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Affairs on a permanent and full-time basis. The LGBT Affairs office recently announced the position will be terminated at the beginning of the next fiscal year. SVA also requested that gen- der identity be added to the University's nondiscrimination policy. Coleman said a task force will be issuing a report concerning the LGBT office by early next month. She said she must wait to hear from the committee before she can give an accurate answer. SVA supporters also expressed their opposition to the proposed changes to the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center. The changes include eliminating the campus-based crisis hot- line and moving two counseling posi- tions to Counseling and Psychological Services. Harper said she hopes a solution to the SAPAC changes can be reached through small group discussions. "We need to talk about the framing of it and get our facts on the table and then we can talk about what's on the table, within the next four weeks," Harper said. "I'm open to having my mind changed and to changing others' minds," she added. Students also expressed concern because of the 30 percent decrease in underrepresented minorities for the upcoming academic year. The University, however, expects an increase in minority admissions after next year, said University Provost Paul Courant, who also attended the meeting. SVA demanded that the University hire a Latino and a Middle Eastern coor- dinator by September for the Office of Multi-Ethnic Student Affairs. Harper agreed to rehire a Latino coor- dinator to replace the previous coordina- tor who left last semester. "The Latino position will be posted within two weeks, and we're going to act more aggressively to fill this position. It has always been a permanent, full-time position," Harper said. Harper agreed that Middle Eastern students need support, but she said the University is still figuring out how to provide those services. Hate crimes are another serious issue on campus, according to both SVA and University administrators. Coleman said she is very concerned about hate inci- dents and assured students that the Safe- ty and Security Committee is already working to combat the problem. Native American students were par- ticularly upset about the costs of last weekend's Ann Arbor Dances for Moth- er Earth Pow Wow - an annual event that celebrates Native American culture. Harper, however, said the Division of Student Affairs always pays the deficit for the Pow Wow at the end of the fiscal year, but this year it was unable to pro- vide an adequate budget for the event. SVA also expressed its concerns about secret society Michigamua. The society was criticized a few years ago for using Native American rituals. Cole- man, however, said it is her understand- ing that the society has moved off campus. When addressing the students' demands for improvements to the Trot- ter House - the student multicultural center - Coleman said she is looking into raising money to renovate the house but added that she is not sure if com- plete renovations are feasible. Finally, SVA wants to establish a Stu- dent Oversight Committee that will have veto power over the Division of Student Affairs. In response, Coleman said, "We are open to having another advisory committee ... but that group will he advisory. We don't have advisory groups that have veto power." NASA Continued from Page 1 sustain human life on the moon and to produce fuel cells for power generation and rocket propulsion. "If we commit to building bases and doing all this infrastructure without understanding the prob- lems we're going to find, we're unlikely to spend our money or spend our resources effectively," England said. Students also questioned NASA's new plan. Raphael Ramos, a graduate student at the College of Engineeering and project man- ager for an instrument that will fly on the next space shuttle, said his engineering experience made him question the directive's feasibility. "I'm a young engineer, but I already know that it's difficult to establish a space program like the one President Bush proposed of this time frame and follow through on it," he said. Diaz seemed cognizant of the time crunch NASA faces in achieving its new goals. "One of the things we've just realized is we'd better get started because 2008 is a lot closer than you'd think," he said. Still, Diaz said he is confident that NASA is moving in the right direction. "This is the kind of plan that any administration will support," he said. "I really believe that a version of this plan will be sus- tainable." Corrections: Please report any errors in the Daily to corrections@michigandaily.com 1'PR The Mc nDDaI DE "' ..._ ' +"._ , "' ","_ Need a job for next Fall/ Winter?? 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