2A-The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 18, 2006 413 E. Huron St., Ann Arbor, MI 48104-1327 www.michigandaily.com DoNNA . FRESARD ALEXIS FLoYD Editor in Chief Business Manager fresard@michigandaily.com business@michigandaily.com CONTACT INFORMATION News Tips Corrections Letters to the Editor Photography Department Arts Section Editorial Page Sports Section Display Sales Classified Sales Online Sales Finance Newsroom: 763-2459 Office hoUs: Sun-Thurs. 11 a.m. - 2 a.m. news@michigandaily.com corrections@michigandaily.com tothedaily@michigandaily.com photo@michigandaily.com 764-0563 artspage@michigandaily.com 763-0379 opinion@michigandaily.com 763-0379 sports@michigandaily.com 764-8585 display@michigandaily.com 764-0554 classified@michigandaily.com 764-0557 onlineads@michigandaily.com 615-0135 finance@michigandaily.com 763-3246 EDITORIAL STAFF Jeffrey Bloomer Managing Editor bloomer@michigandaily.com Karl Stampfl Managing News Editor stampfl@michigandaily.com NEWS EDITORS: Leah Graboski, Christina Hildreth, Anne Joling, Anne VanderMey Emily Beam Editorial Page Editor beam@michigandaily.com Christopher Zbrozek Editorial Page Editor zbrozek@michigandaily.com ASSOCIATE EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Whitney Dibo, Theresa Kennelly, David Russell, Iman Syed Jack Herman Managing Sports Editor herman@michigandaily.com SENIOR SPORTS EDITORS: Scott Bell, H. Jose Bosch, Matt Singer, Kevin Wright, Stephanie Wright SPORTSNIGHTEDITORS:DanBromwich,AmberCovin,MarkGiannotto,Ran Levy,IanRobinson,NateSandals Andrew Sargus Klein ManagingtArtsEditor klein@michigandaily.com Bernie NguyenMang tEdor nguyen@michigandaily.com ASSOC IATE ARTS EDITORS: Kimberly Chou ARTSSUBEDITORS:UdiICig ,Caitlin( owan,PunitMattoo,KristinMac onak i Alex Dziadosz Managing Photo Editor dziadosz@michigandaily.com Mike Hulsebus Managing Photo Editor hulsebus@michigandaily.com ASSOC ATEPEOTO EDITORS:FoCaseTrevor Campbell, Peter Schotenfels Bridget O'Donnell Assistant Managing Editor, Design odonnell@michigandaily.com ASSISTANT DESIGN EDITOR: LisaGentile Phil Dokas Managing Online Editor dokas@michigandaily.com ASSOCIATE ONLINE EDITORS: Angela Cesere James V. DOWd Matz se Editor dowd@michigandaily.com ASSOCIATE MAGAZINEREDITOR: CbisGaerig BUSINESS STAFF Robert Chin Display Sales Manager ASSOCIATE DISPLAY SALES MANAGER: Ben Schrotenboer SPECIAL PROJECT MANAGER: David Dai Kristina Diamantoni Classified Sales Manager ASSISTANT ELASSIFIEDSALES MANAGER: Mchal Mooe Emily Cipriano Online Sales Manager Ryan VanTassel Finance Manager Brittany O'Keefe Layout Manager Chelsea Hoard Production Manager The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winterterms Dy students at the niversity ot MiDig. Ore opy is available free of charge to all readers. bdditioal copies nay Dr pitked ap at the Daily's otfice tor $2. Subscriptiosotr tall tern, startirg inSepteober, via U.S. mail are $110. Winter term (January through April) is $115, yearlong (September through Aprl) is $055.r l iersity atiliates r subject isa reduted subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions forfalltem are 535.sS useridtiorslg ostbDrprepoid. The Mithitar.Only isoanenber ofTe Associated Press od The Associated Collegiate Press. Italian firefighters inspect the wreckage of two subway trains in a station in central Rome yes- terday. A subway train slammed into the back of another that was stopped at a station. Onek killed,'more than 100 hurt in subway crash Passenger says one of the trains appeared to miss a stoplight, but investigators looking into cause ROME (AP) - A subway train plowed into another that was stopped in a central Rome station during rush hour yesterday morning, killing one person and injuring more than 100 as passengers screamed and ran for the exits. Some witnesses said the driver of the moving train appeared to have run a red light. Investigators were trying to determine the cause of the crash. Thick, black smoke filled the Piazza Vittorio Emanuele II subway station, and panicked passengers ran after the crash, witnesses said. Stunned and bloodied passengers were led from the station, according to TV video. "People in my carriage were sprawled all over the floor crying and screaming;said Kahn Jaris Hassan,a 29-year- old native of India, who was in the moving train. "Inside there were many people covered in blood shout- ing for help, many too injured to walk," Hassan said at San Giovanni Hospital, where he was waiting for a friend to be treated. The prefect's office said that 110 people had been taken to hospitals, and that five were in serious condition. The driver of the moving train was trapped in the rub- ble, but was pulled out alive. Earlier reports said he had died at the hospital, but that was later denied. Authorities said the person killed was a 30-year-old Ital- ian woman. She and the most seriously injured had been in the last car of the halted train. Ambulances, firefighters and rescue teams rushed to the station, near Rome's main railway station. Rescue workers set up a field hospital nearby, where they treated dozens of people. Rescuers worked to untangle the wreckage. The mov- ing train had pushed 60to 9 feet into the stopped train, said fire department spokesman Luca Cari. Passenger Andrew Trovaioli, 38, said one of the trains appeared to have missed a stop light. "I saw the red light as the train moved into the station," Trovaioli said. NEWS IN BRIEF SEOUL, South Korea N.K. preparing for second nuke test Satellite images indicate North Korea appears to be getting ready for a second nuclear test, officials said Tuesday, as the defiant communist regime held huge rallies and proclaimed that U.N. sanctions amount toa declaration of war. China, the North's longtime ally and biggest trading partner, warned Pyongyang not to aggravate tensions in the wake of U.N. condemnation of its Oct. 9 atomic blast. And U.S. nuclear envoy Christopher Hill told reporters in Seoul that another nuclear explosion would be "a very belligerent answer" to the world. As the White House acknowledged that the isolated nation might try a second test, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice launched a diplomatic drive to persuade Asian allies and Russia to intensify North Korea's isolation by enforcing sanctions approved by the U.N. Security Council. WASHINGTON U.S. population hits 300 million milestone The nation's population officially hit 300 million at 7:46 a.m. yesterday, when the Census Bureau's population clock rolled over to the big number. But there weren't any wild celebrations, fireworks or any other govern- ment-sponsored hoopla to mark the milestone. Why bother? Many experts think the population actually hit 300 million months ago. "I don't think anybody believes it will be the precise moment when the population hits 300 million,' Howard Hogan, the Census Bureau's associate director for demographic programs, said in an interview before the mile- stone was reached. But, he added, "We're confident that we're somewhat close." WASHINGTON Bush greenlights terror interrogation law Some of the most notorious names in the war on terror are headed toward prosecution after President Bush signed a law yesterday authorizing military trials of terrorism suspects. The legislation also eliminates some of the rights defendants are usually guaranteed under U.S. law, and it authorizes continued harsh interrogations of terror suspects. Imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and awaiting trial are Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the accused mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks, Ramzi Binalshibh, an alleged would-be 9/11 hijacker, and Abu Zubaydah, who was believed to be a link between Osama bin Laden and many al-Qaida cells. KABUL, Afghanistan Afghan president: Taliban leader is in Pakistan Afghan President Hamid Karzai told The Associated Press that Mullah Omar, the supreme Taliban leader who headed the repressive Islamist regime ousted by U.5.-led forces five years ago, is hiding in the southeastern Pakistani city of Quetta. Despite U.S. efforts to ease acrimony betweentwo key anti-terror allies, the Afghan leader in an interview late Monday also blamed neighboring Pakistan for a surge in Taliban violence in Afghanistan and demanded President Pervez Musharraf crack down on militant sanctuaries. - Compiledfrom Daily wire reports CORRECTIONS A story on page 1B of Oct. 9's Daily (Hensick plays hero in victory) misidentified hockey defenseman Jack Johnson as a freshman. He is a sophomore. H A story on the front page of Oct. 12's Daily (Ford can't attend dedication) should not have said that the groundbreaking for Weill Hall was in 1994. It was in 2004. A story on the front page of Oct. 10's Daily misspelled Prof. Carol Jacobsen's name. The same story should have said "eighteen of the 20 women who were con- victed of murder," not "eighteen of the 20 women who murdered their husbands." Please report any error in the Daily to corrections@michigandaily.com. d A - 00 4aoc ~5l~s Study: Common medications send 700,000 to ER yearly CHICAGO (AP) - Harmful first to reveal the nationwide scope reactions to some of the most widely of the problem. People overf65 faced used medicines - from insulin to the greatest risks. a common antibiotic - sent more "This is an important study than 700,000 Americans to emer- because it reinforces the really gency rooms each year, landmark substantial risks that there are government research shows. in everyday use of drugs," said Accidental overdoses and allergic patient safety specialist Bruce reactions to prescription drugs were Lambert, a professor at the Uni- the most frequent cause of serious versity of Illinois at Chicago's :Oii i I ii 0wly JOJIJVS I : " 1: ";, : :, , 4 @ sift" 1983 .i 4 f ANVWIGO'S7 °fftVfiS SAN 6 § .. ' SUBS SO FAST YOU'LL FREAK! I 929 E. ANN ST. - 734.913.9200 600 PACKARD ~ 734.741.9200 1207 S. UNIVERSITY ~ 734.827.2600 342 S. STATE ST. - 734.222.7000 2615 PLYMOUTH RD. - 734.930.2000 @2436 JIMMY JOKKI$ flANCH111.lwIc, JIMMY JOHNS EillN COM 13K ii