NEWS The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 20, 2004 - 3A ON CAMPUS 'U' president speaks on future of school University President Mary Sue Cole- man will give a speech today at 3:15 p.m. in Rackham Auditorium. Her speech will outline her priorities, ini- tiatives and ongoing projects for the school. The Faculty Senate will co- sponsor the event. The speech will be followed by a reception. Forum explores relations between U.S., Saudi Arabia A forum on relations between Saudi Arabia and the U.S. titled "Crisis or Opportunity?" will be held today by scholars from the King Saud Univer- sity and the United States. The forum will be held from 1 to 6 p.m. at the U.S. Palmer Commons Forum Hall Amphi- theater at 100 Washtenaw Ave. The event is free. NOTES Officer assaulted at football game One person was arrested for assault- ing a police officer and resisting arrest at Saturday's football game against San Diego State. The officer was not hurt. One person was also arrested for pos- session of controlled substances, and five minors were arrested and cited for underage drinking at the game. The Department of Public Safety reported 11 citations. Four of these were for possession of alcohol in the stadium and three were for urinating in public. Seven people were ejected from the game, including three for unauthorized entry, three for passing IDs through the fence and one for throwing projectiles. First-aid personnel treated 60 people. Person jailed after, gun found in car Ani ndividual not affiliated with the University was arrested by DPS early yesterday morning after a handgun was found in a vehicle on Monroe Street. The vehicle was parked with its door open in the 500 block of Monroe, and a handgun was visible on the driver's side floor near the seat. DPS investigates laser infraction DPS sent an officer out to East Quad Residence Hall Friday night to inves- tigate one or more persons who had reportedly been shining a laser pointer out onto the sidewalk. THIS DAY In Daily History Conference seeks to prevent gov't spying efforts September 20, 1978 - Attorneys, academics and concerned citizens from across the country prepared to converge on Ann Arbor at the Michigan Union over the weekend for the first National Organizing Conference to Stop Govern- ment Spying. The conference - billed as a "nuts and bolts" organizing effort by Ann Arbor coordinator Tom Shaker, a gradu- ate student - was primarily concerned with devising strategies to counter- act domestic government spying and harassment. "The time for being shocked is over. Now it's what you can do about it," Shak- er said. "This is taking it a step further than everybody just being appalled." CORRECTIONS An article on Page 1 of Friday's Source says Bush, Kerry to have three debates Bush carmpaign denies reports of tentative deal NEW YORK (AP)-The campaigns of President Bush and Democratic presi- dent candidate Sen. John Kerry of Mas- sachusetts tentatively have agreed to a series of three debates that both sides hope will give them momentum in the closing weeks of the presidential elec- tion campaign, a person familiar with the debate negotiations said last night. The agreement, not yet final, calls for the presidential debates to be spread over a two-week period begin- ning Sept. 30. Details of the debates were being negotiated by former Secretary of State James Baker III for Bush and attorney Vernon Jordan for Kerry. It was not clear when any agreement would be announced. The Bush campaign denied that there was a deal. "No deal has been reached. Reports of a tentative agreement - I don't even know what that means - are false," said Nicolle Devenish, communica- tions director for the Bush campaign. She said Baker had told his staff there was not a deal. But a person familiar with the debate negotiations said there was a tentative deal for three debates but that some details were still being worked out. The person spoke on condition of anonym- ity since the agreement is not final. The tentative agreement also calls for one vice presidential debate on Oct. 5 between Vice President Dick Cheney and Sen. John Edwards of North Caro- lina, Kerry's running mate. The source said the two campaigns have agreed on the dates and sites pro- posed by the nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates - Sept. 30 at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Fla.; Oct. 8 at Washington Uni- versity in St. Louis; and Oct. 13 at Ari- zona State University in Tempe, Ariz. The co-chairmen of the debate com- mission told representatives for Bush and Kerry on Wednesday that they must act immediately to finalize details for the debates, with the first only two weeks away. The Kerry campaign agreed last month to the commission's proposal for venues, dates and moderators for three debates involving the presidential candidates and one for the vice presi- dential candidates. However, the Bush campaign would not commit to the pro- posal. With a guaranteed TV audience of tens of millions of people, the debates could have a major impact because of the closeness of the race and the voters who still count themselves as unde- cided. In a poll by the Pew Research Center, 29 percent of those surveyed said the debates would matter in deciding how they would vote. Some 68 percent said their minds were already made up. Those undecided voters could make a huge difference. Accordingz to a Nielsen survey, 46.6 million people watched the first debate between Bush and Al Gore in 2000. The second and third debates drew audiences of 37.6 million, and 37.7 million, respectively. In 2000, Bush and Democratic nomi- nee Al Gore debated three times in 90-minute sessions in October. Their running mates debated once that month. For the third presidential debate, Bush and Gore answered questions posed by undecided voters from the St. Louis area during a town-hall session. The three presidential debates between Bush and Gore drew televi- sion audiences ranging from 37 million to 47 million people, according to the commission, the first debate gaining the largest audience. The vice presiden- tial debate was viewed by more than 28 million people. Tropical Storm Jeanne leaves 90 dead, floods Haiti GONAIVES, Haiti (AP) - Tropical Storm Jeanne brought raging floodwa- ters to Haiti, killing at least 90 people in the battered nation and leaving doz- ens of Haitian families huddled on rooftops as the storm pushed further out into the open seas yesterday, offi- cials said. Floods tore through the northwestern coastal town of Gonaives and surround- ing areas, covering crops and turning roads into rivers. U.S.-backed interim Prime Minister Gerard Latortue and his interior minister toured the area in a U.N. truck yesterday, but were not able to reach many areas because of washed out roads. "We don't know how many dead there are," Latortue said. "2004 has been a terrible year." Workers with the Catholic humani- tarian agency Caritas Internationalis picked up 62 bodies in pickup trucks and counted another 18 at a morgue in Gonaives alone, said Rev. Venel Suffrard, the organization's local director. Suffrard said he expected the toll to rise. The floods killed another 10 people in other parts of the country, mostly in the northwest, said Dieufort Deslorges, a spokesman for the Haitian Ministry of Interior. A World Health Organization work- er said he had toured parts of down- town Gonaives and saw people pushing wooden carts filled with cadavers. "There is no life left in the center of town," U.N. health worker Pierre Adam said. The deaths came four months after floods killed more than 3,000 people on the Haitian-Dominican border. In February, a three-week rebellion ousted President Jean- Bertrand Aristide and left about 300 dead. Several people were reported miss- ing and feared dead. Unlike the Dominican Republic, much of Haiti is deforested and unable to hold back floodwaters. At 11 p.m., Jeanne was 180 miles east-southeast of the Bahamian island of San Salvador, moving north near 8 mph. Storm-force winds strength- ened to 60 mph and stretched up to 85 miles from its center. Jeanne didn't appear likely to hit the storm-battered southeastern United States. It was expected to turn south over the next two days and head back out into the Atlantic, away from Flori- da and other states that have been bat- tered by three major storms already this season. Amarils Santos carries wood from her destroyed house in Ramon Santana, 90 kilometers east of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic on Saturday. S.if , . S FREE MOVIE PASSES! The Michigan Theatre seeks high-energy, promotionally-minded student interns to join our Street Marketing Team. You will distribute flyers in cafes, dorms and other campus buildings and on kiosks. Please email Lee Berry at lberry@michtheater.org The University of Michigan Ninth Annual ENERGY FEST 2004 m Promoting energy conservation, renewable energy, and a sustainable environment Saudi Arabia and the US: Crisis or Opportunity? Religion & Social Transformations in Saudi Society Marcia Inhorn, Moderator Abdullah Al-Askar (King Saud) - Question of Wahabism Eleanor Abdella Doumato (Brown) - Saudi Religious Education Ibrahim Al-Beayeyz (King Saud) - Television in the Arab World: A Liberal Medium in a Conservative Region Dalal Al-Tamimi (King Faisal) - Saudi Women in Medicine Saudi Politics Susan Waltz, Moderator Ibrahim Al-Muhanna (Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Resources) - Saudi Oil Policy in a Dynamic International Market Gwenn Okruhlik (UT Austin) - Nation Building in Saudi Arabia Juan Cole (Michigan) - Saudi Arabia and Iraq U.S.-Saudi Relations & the War on Terror Mark Tessler, Moderator Saleh Ai-Mani (King Saud) - Structural Changes in Saud- American Relations Othman Al-Rawaf (Majlis Ash Shura) - The Challenges of Tuesday, September 21 Central Campus Diag: 11:00 to 2:00 Live Music from 12-1 Thursday, September 23 North Campus Portico Plaza: 11:00 to 2:00 Extremism & the War on Terrorism Asaad Al-Shamlan (Institute of Diplomatic Studies) - The Impact of the War on Terrorism & U.S. -Saudi Relations Co-sponsored by CMENAS & King Saud University Monday, September 20, 1-6pm Forum Hall, Palmer Commons, 100 Washtenaw Ave (next to Life Sciences Institute) 1