Thursday, September 15, 2005 WEEKEND MAGAZINE IS DEAD - XLOY3 G :E FST ATEMENT ... B SECTION News 3A Opinion 4A State sheriffs to judges and lawmakers: Stop crowding jails with drug users Eric Jackson explores the science of politics One-hundredfourteen years ofed'orzzlfreedom www.mchiandaiy.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXV, No. 147 ®2005 The Michigan Daily FROM THE EDITORS Today, we at The Michigan Daily debut our new magazine, The Statement. For many years, this Thursday insert was known as Weekend Magazine, but we felt it needed a change. This new magazine has an updated design, new content and a more defined focus. Instead of being strictly a local campus-life magazine, The Statement features more in-depth reporting on issues affecting both the University and the city of Ann Arbor. It is more intelligent, with the goal of exposing new ideas and information to readers in a magazine format. We have kept some favorites from Weekend Magazine, but have shfted our overall vision. It is our goal to provide you, the readers, with the highest quality journalism each day. The Statement reflects this goal. . -4 Jason Z. Pesick Editor in Chief Doug Wernert Magazine Editor 'seen as city and regional tech hub By Michael Kan Daily News Editor YPSILANTI - Is Ann Arbor the next Sili- con Valley? Not likely. But local business leaders, along with the University administration, hope to cul- tivate their own hi-tech commercial hub in the surrounding region to boost the city and the state's economy. Elected officials and local companies con- vened yesterday to address Michigan's ailing economy at the annual Ann Arbor Area Cham- ber of Commerce conference known by its new name, Impact 2005. Once a mainstay of Michigan's economy, the state's automotive industry is in decline and business entrepreneurs and state leaders agreed it's time to restructure the economy. Cities in Southeast Michigan would be at the forefront of this change, conference panelists said, as these cities have a growing, but largely unknown resource they can use to revitalize the economy - high-tech business sectors. "We have to be prepared for this changing See IMPACT, Page 7A Tul ne U to reopen in Jan Students, administrators working to get facilities working, athletic teams still playing as a symbolic gesture By Karl Stampfl Daily Staff Reporter HOUSTON - During Hurricane Katrina, Tulane University President Scott Cowen refused to abandon his university. He chose instead to weather the category-4 storm bun- kered in the Reily Student Recreation Center. "He felt like he was captain of a sinking ship and wanted to be there with it," said Tulane Communications Director Mike Strecker. Cowen made it through the storm. He and most other Tulane administrators are now headquartered in temporary office space in Houston, miles away from the floods, chaos and crimes of New Orleans. Their offices, which they moved into Tuesday after spend- ing time at Jackson State University in Missis- sippi and a Houston-area hotel, serve as a base for information technology, campus facilities and services, legal counsel, payroll, the office of the dean of student affairs and admissions, among other tasks. None of the university's students, faculty or staff was killed in the disaster as far as the uni- versity knows, Strecker said, but they still have heard from only about 1,700 of their 13,000 students. The Tulane campus avoided the massive damage that much of the city suffered because it rests on the higher ground of Orleans Parish. Experts believe most of the renovations will be infrastructure repair. "Your definition of what a disaster is and what a bad hit is changes," Strecker said. "I talked to someone yesterday that had five feet of water in their home and was thankful it wasn't more." It is not yet clear how much it will cost to clean the campus or how much of that cost insurance will cover. What is clear is the commitment university officials have made to reopening the campus in January for the spring semester. "Based on facts and circumstances we are very confident we will reopen in January," Cowen wrote in a mass address to Tulane stu- dents over the Internet. Strecker did stress that the campus will not reopen if the ravaged city is still unsafe for stu- dents by that time, but he said all signs point toward it being so. Most students were on campus before the hurricane hit August 29. All were evacuated. Some went back to their homes while others traveled on university buses to Jackson State University, where they were sheltered until they found a means to return to their families or enroll in other universities. Among those were the University of Michi- gan and other academic powerhouses such as Harvard University and Brown University, where tens of thousands of students fight for spots in their classes each year. The University of Michigan has taken in about 47 undergradu- ates and a dozen graduate students so far. The school that accepted the most students was the University of Texas-Austin, where about 300 Tulane students enrolled. Faculty have also dispersed to work at insti- tutions across the country, including the Uni- versity of Michigan. Faculty generally will not teach full-time classes, but will continue their research at those schools, Strecker said. Despite having no home fields or practice facilities, Tulane varsity sports teams will play this season. They will be based in several col- leges in the South. Some, especially those in the media, have balked at the idea of sports continuing while the rest of the campus and city is in mourn- ing. "Our president was very clear that it was important that the teams continue to play sym- See TULANE, Page 7A AP PHOTO Members of the 82nd Airborne Division make their way toward the Tulane University medical center In New Orleans, Monday, two weeks after Hurricane Katrina swept through the city. Gay porn director returning to campus By Karl Stampfl Daily Staff Reporter A pornographic website plans to continue its campus-invasion tour this fall after a sum- mer hiatus, one of the site's producers told an undercover Michigan Daily reporter in an instant messenger conversation. The producer only identified himself as Gary. Last spring, the producers of the website, midwestxbois.com, first admitted to filming on campus in bathrooms and dorm rooms - a violation of University policy and state law - then later denied it. But when asked by the undercover reporter recently whether the site would agree to film or take pictures on University property, a producer of the site, which specializes in gay pornography, wrote, "We might shoot in a bathroom on campus or something." The invasion tour has stretched across Southwest Michigan from Eastern Michigan University to Wayne State University. About 30 male models appear on the site. They range from fully clothed to completely naked, with some performing sex acts. Later in the conversation, he also agreed to film in a dorm room at the University, and recalled filming in dorms at Michigan State University. The University's residence hall lease prohibits students from running a com- mercial business out of their dorm rooms. The producer also said he had filmed out- doors in a state park near MSU. The charge for engaging in sex or pornography in pub- lic places would be indecent exposure, which could qualify as a misdemeanor and include up to one year in jail and a $1,000 fine. When asked if he knew that it was illegal to film or take pictures of pornography on cam- pus, the producer told the undercover reporter not to worry, that they would only do it if they were sure they would not be caught. If the University discovered that the film- ing was taking place, it would take immedi- ate action, University spokeswoman Julie Peterson said. Peterson said Department of Public Safety officers and the Student Affairs staff was alerted and will be watchful for evi- dence of activity like recruitment posters or murmurs within the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender community. No evidence has been found. The first invasion tour prompted last spring's e-mail from University Dean of Stu- dents Sue Eklund warning students against participating in pornography on campus, not- ing its psychological effects, as well as its illegality. Peterson stressed the University's concern that the site will exploit students, who are just beginning to develop and under- stand their sexual identity. "For a young person, the invitation to appear in a film may feel momentarily excit- ing and empowering," Peterson said. "But those decisions may ultimately prove damag- ing to the person in ways he or she may not immediately be able to foresee." As an example, she pointed to the Universi- ty's Sexual Assault Crisis Line, which some- times fields calls from students disturbed that videos or pictures of them engaging in sexual acts have been shared via the Internet. The producer said the site uses hotel rooms for the majority of its filming of col- lege students. Baghdad sees bloodiest day of war A1-Zarqawi, leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, allegedly declares 'all-out war' on Shiites, Iraqi government BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - More than a dozen highly coordinated bombings ripped through Baghdad yesterday, killing at least 160 people and wounding 570 in the cap- ital's bloodiest day since the end of major combat. Many of the victims were day laborers lured by a suicide attacker posing as an employer. Al-Qaida claimed respon- sibility for the attacks in the name of Sunni insurgents, saying it was a retaliation for the rout of militants at a base close to the Syr- ian border. The spasm of violence terrorized the capi- tal for more than nine hours. The first attack, at 6:30 a.m., was the deadliest: a suicide car blast which tore through the predominantly Shiite Muslim neighborhood of Kazimiyah. In what was believed to be a new tactic, the bomber set off the explosive after call- ing the construction and other workers to his small van and enticing them with promises of employment, a witness said. At least 112 people were killed and more than 200 were wounded, according to Health Ministry offi- cials. Twisted hulks of vehicles blocked the bloodstained main street in Kazimiyah's Oruba Square. Al-Qaida's leader in Iraq, Abu Musab al- Zarqawi, purportedly declared "all-out war" on Shiites, Iraqi troops and the government in an audiotape posted Wednesday on an Internet site known for carrying extremist Islamic content. The al-Zarqawi tape was a clear attempt, coming on the heels of the attacks, to create a climate of fear, sow deeper sectarian dis- cord and scare Iraqis away from the Oct. 15 referendum on a new constitution. Iraqi forces arrested two insurgents in connection with the Kazimiyah bombing, one of them a Palestinian and the other a Libyan, Iraqi television quoted Prime Min- ister Ibrahim al-Jaafari as saying. Al-Jaafari also said the suicide bomber was a Syrian, without offering any details how the identi- fication was made so quickly. The attacks came as U.S. and Iraqi forces pressed their offensive against insurgents in the northern city of Tal Afar and along the Euphrates River valley, striking hard at what officials have said were militants sneaking across the border from Syria. Al-Qaida in Iraq said in a Web posting that it launched the attacks, some less than 10 minutes apart, in response to the Tal Afar offensive, which began Saturday and evict- ed most insurgents from the city about 50 miles from Syria and 260 miles northwest of Baghdad. "To the nation of Islam, we give you the good news that the battles of revenge for the See IRAQ, Page 5A AP PHOTO Iraqi soldiers lead away men they detained after three fellow soldiers were injured by a booby trap in Tal Afar, Iraq, 260 miles northwest of Baghdad, yesterday. A senior U.S. military official said he believed a rash of bombings in Baghdad was retaliation for the joint Iraqi-U.S. sweep through Tal Afar in recent days to evict insurgents from their stronghold near the Syrian border. Con artists use Katrina tragedy to lure in e-mail scam victims