NEWS The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 27, 2005 - 3 ON CAMPUS 'U' to host 21st annual Engineering fair today The 21st Annual University of Mich- igan Engineering Career Fair will be held in the Duderstadt Center on the first floor of the Michigan Union from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. today. This event gives students the opportunity to speak with companies from across the nation about their career ambitions. MSA to hold City Council debate The Michigan Student Assembly will be holding a debate between Ward two City Council candidates Tom Bourque and Stephen Rapundalo. The debate will be held at the South Lounge of Mary Markley Residence Hall tonight at 7:30 p.m. Free food will be served. Director will discuss film on Islam and culture The Muslim Students' Association is holding a free film screening tonight from 7:15 to 9:30 p.m. at Hutchins Hall, room 150. Following the screening, there will be a question-and-answer time with the director, Omar Mahmood. He will be addressing the role of Islam in American culture. CRIME NOTES Two computers stolen from The Michigan Daily Two computers were stolen from the Student Publications Building sometime this weekend. The comput- ers belonged to the Sports section of The Michigan Daily. The Department of Public Safety says they believe that access was gained through a broken window on the first floor. Each com- puter was estimated at $1,500. There are no suspects at this time. Caller reports intoxicated man with pants down A caller reported that there was an unknown male under West Hall Arch with his pants down on Mon- day in the early evening. Since the man, who was not affiliated with *the University, had his pants on by the time the Department of Public Safety arrived, he was only cited for open intoxication, read trespassing rules and then escorted off of Uni- versity property: Case of water stolen from East Quad A caller reported an incident of lar- ceny in East Quad when a case of water was stolen yesterday. The water was sto- len when it was left unattended in the lobby. DPS does not have any suspects at this time. THIS DAY In Daily History University officials refuse to release details regarding record tuition hike Sept. 27, 1973 - University officials refused to release infor- mation explaining their rationale for a record 24 percent tuition hike, yesterday. Director of the Office of Financial Analysis, Frederick Oliver blocked a request by a Daily staff reporter to be given the statistical informa- tion that would ultimately explain the tuition hike. Oliver's decision echoed a previous refusal to make tic~ infnrmntinn nvnilnhle by C'hief Army rivate ound England faces up to 10 years in prison after being convicted in prison scandal FORT HOOD, Texas (AP) - Army Pfc. Lynndie England, whose smiling poses in photos of detainee abuse at Baghdad's Abu Ghraib prison made her the face of the scandal, was convicted yesterday by a military jury on six of seven counts. England, 22, was found guilty of one count of conspiracy, four counts of maltreating detainees and one count of committing an indecent act. She was acquitted on a second con- spiracy count. The jury of five male Army officers took about two hours to reach its ver- dict. Her case now moves to the sen- tencing phase, which will be heard by the same jury starting today. England tried to plead guilty in May to the same counts she faced this month in exchange for an undisclosed sentenc- ing cap, but a judge threw out the plea deal. She now faces a maximum 10 years in prison. England, wearing her dark green dress uniform, stood at attention yes- terday as the verdict was read by the jury foreman. She showed no obvious emotion afterward. Asked for comment after the verdict, defense lawyer Capt. Jonathan Crisp said, "The only reaction I can say is, 'I under- stand."' England's trial is the last for a group of nine Army reservists charged with mistreating prisoners at Abu Ghraib in Iraq, a scandal that badly damaged the United States' image in the Muslim world despite quick condemnation of the abuse by President Bush. Two other troops were convicted in trials and the remaining six made plea deals. Several of those soldiers testified at England's trial. Prosecutors used graphic photos of England to support their contention that she was a key figure in the abuse conspiracy. One photo shows England holding a naked detainee on a leash. In others, she smiles and points to prisoners in humiliating poses. Sheehan and hundreds of others arrested while protesting Iraq war Protesters rallied at the front gate of the White House to request a meeting with President Bush WASHINGTON (AP) - Cindy Sheehan, the Cali- fornia mother who became a leader of the anti-war movement after her son died in Iraq, was arrested yes- terday along with hundreds of others protesting out- side the White House. Sheehan, carrying a photo of her son in his Army uniform, rallied with other protesters in a park across the street from the White House and then marched to the gate of the executive mansion to request a meeting with President Bush. The protesters later sat down on the pedestrian walkway in front of the White House - knowing they would be arrested - and began singing and chanting "Stop the war now!" Police warned them three times that they were breaking the law by failing to move along, then began making arrests. One man climbed over the White House fence and was quickly subdued by Secret Ser- vice agents. Sheehan, 48, was the first taken into custody. She smiled as she was carried to the curb, then stood up and walked to a police vehicle as protesters chanted, "The whole world is watching." "It's an honor to be arrested with this group of people," said Gary Handschumacher, 58, of Crawford, Colo., who was waiting for police to arrest him. Sgt. Scott Fear, spokesman for the U.S. Park Police, said about 370 protesters were arrested over four and a half hours. All but one were charged with demonstrating with- out a permit, a misdemeanor. One person faced a charge of crossing a police line. Sheehan's 24-year-old son, Casey, was killed last year in an ambush in Sadr City, Iraq. She attracted worldwide attention last month with her 26-day vigil outside Bush's Texas ranch. Yesterday's demonstration was part of a broader anti-war effort on Capitol Hill organized by United for Peace and Justice, an umbrella group. Representatives from anti-war groups met yesterday with members of Congress to urge them to work to end the war and to bring the troops home. White House press secretary Scott McClellan said Bush is "very much aware" of the protesters and "recognizes that there are differences of opinion" on Iraq. "It's the right ofthe American people to peacefully express their views. And that's what you're seeing here in Washing- ton, D.C.," McClellan said. "They're well-intentioned, but the president strongly believes that withdrawing ... would make us less safe and make the world more dangerous." The protest yesterday followed a massive dem- onstration Saturday that drew a crowd of 100,000 or more, the largest such gathering in the capital since the war began in March 2003. On Sunday, a rally supporting the war drew about 500 people. Speakers included veterans of World War II and the war in Iraq, as well as family members of soldiers killed in Iraq. Bulletproof vests investigated by Justice Department Defective vests purchased for President Bush and the first lady WASHINGTON (AP) - The Justice Department is investigating whether a Michigan company sold defective bulletproof vests for President Bush, federal agents and local police and then waited nearly two years to alert customers that the body armor could be unsafe. A former research chief for Second Chance Body Armor Inc. is coop- erating with the criminal investiga- tion and testified this month that the Secret Service tested and bought some of the defective vests for the president and first lady Laura Bush. The Penta- gon obtained the same armor for elite troops who guard generals, according to transcripts obtained by The Associ- ated Press. Many sales occurred well after Cen- tral Lake, Mich.-based Second Chance had been alerted that the Japanese-made Zylon synthetic material in the vests was degrading faster than expected from heat, light and moisture exposure, allowing bullets to potentially penetrate the armor, according to the former employee's tes- timony and other company documents. Prosecutors have gathered docu- ments showing that Second Chance was alerted as early as 1998 by the Japanese material maker, Toyobo Co., that there were problems with Zylon maintaining its protective properties under certain conditions. By 2001, Second Chance's research chief, Aaron Westrick, was pleading unsuccessfully with his company's pres- idAnt to renlae the ves tsafter his own company could pay for a replacement initiative, the memo shows. But Second Chance customers were not alerted to the problems until September 2003 - after a Califor- nia police officer was shot to death wearing the vest and a Pennsylvania officer was seriously wounded. In the interim, the Secret Service paid $53,000 in 2002 to Second Chance for body armor, enough to equip the president and the security detail that protects him and other VIPs, federal procurement records show. Legal professionals and government officials familiar with the inquiry con- firmed Westrick's account about the Secret Service and Bush. They said the criminal investigation is in addi- tion to a Justice Department lawsuit filed last summer that accuses Second Chance and Toyobo of fraud. The offi- cials spoke only on condition of ano- nymity, citing grand jury secrecy. Robert H. Skilton, Second Chance's lawyer, did not return calls to his office last week. Some of the company's non- Zylon assets have been sold and others are in bankruptcy. Westrick's lawyer, Stephen M. Kohn, said Sunday that his client was cooperating with the criminal investigation. "Greed prevailed over the safety of police, soldiers and even the presi- dent of the United States," Kohn said. "The officials who personally profited from selling the defective vests to law enforcement must be held accountable to the fullest extent of the criminal code." Throughout 2001 and 2002, agencies from the Pentaion to locnl nolicehouht