The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS BEIJING North Koreans ready to start talks on nuclear weapons North Korea expressed its readi- ness earlier today to discuss initial steps of its nuclear disarmament, raising hopes for the first tangible progress at international talks on Pyongyang's atomic weapons pro- gram since they began more than three years ago. "We are prepared to discuss first-stage measures," the North's nuclear envoy Kim Kye Gwan said on arriving in Beijing for the six- nation negotiations set to start later today. Mediareportshave suggestedthe North may agree to freeze its main nuclear reactor and allow interna- tional inspectors in exchange for energy aid as a starting step to dis- arm. WASHINGTON Five Army Reserve officers indicted on corruption charges Three U.S. Army Reserve officers were indicted yesterday, accused of taking part in a hid-rigging scam that steered millions of dollars for Iraq reconstruction projects to a contractor in exchange for cash, luxury cars and jewelry. An American businessman in Romania was charged as the go- between for the military officers and the contractor. The husband of one of the reservists was accused of helping smuggle tens of thousands of dollars into the United States that the couple used to pay for a deck and a hot tub at their New Jer- sey house. Charges against the five include bribery, conspiracy, wire fraud, money laundering and transport- ing stolen property. WASHINGTON Poll: Americans ready to normalize relations with Cuba In nearly equal measure, Americans say they don't like Cuban President Fidel Castro but do want the United States to re-establish regular diplomatic relations with the communist island nation after 46 years of estrangement. Less than half of those polled think Cuba will become a democ- racy after the 80-year-old revolu- tionary leader dies or permanently steps aside. However, 89 percent in The Associated Press-Ipsos poll say they think Cubans will be better off or about the same when Castro is gone. Castro has appeared to be in fail- ing health for six months and has temporarily shifted power to his younger brother Raul. Rumors have been rampant about his ailments and how long he can survive. The poll suggests the Cold War animosity that has defined U.S.- Cuba relations for nearly a half-cen- tury may be fading. ROME American soldier to be tried in Italy for 'political murder' A judge yesterday ordered a U.S. soldier to stand trial in absentia for the fatal shooting of an Italian intelligence agent at a checkpoint in Baghdad, the pros- ecutor said. Spc. Mario Lozano is indicted for murder and attempted mur- der in the death of Nicola Calipari, who was shot on March 4, 2005, on his way to the Baghdad airport shortly after securing the release of an Italian journalist who had been kidnapped in the Iraqi capi- tal, prosecutor Pietro Saviotti said. According to prosecutors, the judge said in his ruling that Lozano can be tried for "political murder," because Calipari was a civil ser- vant and his slaying damaged Italy's interests. Prosecutors so far have not sought the soldier's arrest. Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said there are no plans to make Lozano available for the trial. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 25,000 The reward in U.S. dollars that the health ministry of Brazil has offered to high school students who design the best condom vend- ing machine, Stuff Magazine reported. To increase safe sex awareness, these machines may be distributed throughout schools as early as 2008 with hopes of spreading the machines to bars and 24-hour gas stations. DORMS From page 1A Administrators said that although some students leave dorms for off-campus housing because of the strict rules, they aren't worried that a perceived increase in enforce- ment will dissuade students from returning to live in the dorms. "We certainly are aware that some students choose to leave on- campus housing to get out from rule enforcement," Housing spokesman Alan Levy said. "We're not aware that students are leaving hous- ing because they feel like housing didn't doa good enough job enforc- ing its rules." Engineering senior Tony Bri- eschke, an RA in Alice Lloyd Hall, said in an e-mail interview that there hasn't been any pressure on RAs to crack down on students. "I do not feel that there has been much of a difference in the way in which we are trained to deal with such situations, nor has there been a particular emphasis on being more strict," said Brieschke, who also served as an RA in Alice Lloyd hall two years ago. Brieschke said he has seen stu- dents violating the rules more fre- quently. "It seems as though some feel that they can do whatever they want, which obviously leads to les- sons being learned the hard way," Brieschke said. Some dorm dwellers said they were surprised to learn that the number of incidents had increased. "It seems like I'm under less scrutiny now than a couple of years ago," said Gideon DAssandro, an LSA junior who lives in South Quad Residence Hall. Ben Ruano, an LSA sophomore and chair of the Residence Hall Association's Housing Student Con- flict Resolution Affair Committee, said University Housing is discuss- ing ways to rein in student behavior. "It does seem that they're trying to crack down," Ruano said. Housing administrators have dis- cussed revising the student code of conduct - which all students must sign in order to live in the residence halls - so that it would ban the pos- session of empty alcohol containers in substance-free housing. Even students over the age of 21would be forbidden from possessing alcohol bottles, cans and paraphernalia. Members of RHA discussed the change and decided to oppose it because it restricts the creative expression of students living in the residence halls, Ruano said. Some students use bottles to decorate their room, even making lamps or vases from them. "I already gave them the opinion of RHA, butI don't know if they're going to take that into consider- ation," he said. Levy said University Housing decided not to implement the plan. Administrators said much of the increase in alcohol-related inci- dents can be explained by recent changes in state law. In 2004, Gov. Jennifer Granholm signed Public Act 63, which deemed the body a container for the purpos- es of minor-in-possession citations. Before the act went into effect, minors couldn't receive a citation for alcohol possession unless they were discovered with alcohol. Before the implementation of the "body is a container" clause, many alcohol-related incidents in the residence halls weren't reported to the University, said Stacy Vander Velde, assistant director for student conduct and conflict resolution at Housing. "Now we don't have that option," Vander Velde said. "That's why there's been this enormous volume of incidents." After the new law took effect on Sept. 1, 2004, the number of alco- hol- and drug-related incidents at the University jumped. It increased by 8.9 percent per resident the year after the law went into effect. The revised MIP law didn't have the same effect on all state univer- sities, though. There were less alco- hol-related incidents at Michigan State University last year than the year before the law was changed, documents show. The increase in alcohol-related incidents could have occurred regardless - alcohol and drug vio- lations increased by 39.2 percent per resident in the two years before the law went into effect, indicating that the trend had already begun. The increasing trend can't be blamed entirely on binge-drinking students, though. Although violations of the Uni- versity's drug and alcohol policy still comprise more than half of all incidents, other incidents - like violations of quiet hours - have increased nearly 80 percent over the last five years. Levy said the increase in alcohol- related incidents has led to a corre- sponding rise in other incidents. For instance, many students cited for quiet hours violations are also cited for alcohol possession, he said. A new method of compiling inci- dents could also have artificially inflat- ed the statistics, administrators said. In 2005, the University revised its methodology for counting inci- dents. Starting with last year's data, the University began to organize incidents based on the location of the violation, rather than the residence of the students involved, Vander Velde said. Students not living in the residence halls and visitors from outside the University now appear in the data, while they were previously omitted. Thursday, February 8, 2007 - 3A ROWDY WEST QUAD No residence hall hasbeen hit harder than West Quad by the recent waveof incidents. Preliminary documents show that inci- dents involving 201students took place in West Quad last semester, while just176stu- dents were involved in West Quad incidents during the previous twoyears combined. West Quad had the most incidents of any residence hall on campus last semester. LanaeGill,Coordinatorof Residence Edu- cation for West Quad, refused to comment. Students, though, said stricter enforce- ment oftrulesby a new Departmentof Public Safety officern- HousingSecurity OfficerJason Green - might have helped cause the increase. LSA sophomore Kevin Grinnell said his friend's room was searched earlierthis year because theofficerwalked by and smelled alcohol. Although thetofficer found no alcohol in the room, he told the student that he looked drunk because his eyes were bloodshot, Grinnell said. Grinnell said it was probably theresultof sleep deprivation. Declan Lugin, security captain for Uni- versity Housing, said that there hasn't been a policy shift towards tougherenforcement. "While all of our officers operate under thesame procedural guidelinessome may be more intrinsicallyvigilant than others," Lugin said. "There is no truth to the notion that either DPS or Housing Security have become more strict." I.- Diplomats reluctant to take Iraq postings The University of Michigan Museum of Art El a / = 1301 South University Ann Arbor. Michigan 734.763.urnma wwwumma ufyiich edu HOURS Tu, Sa, Su: u am to 6 pm We, Th, Fr: in am to 1o pm By HELENE COOPER The New York Times WASHINGTON - While the diplomats and foreign service employees of the State Department have always been expected to staff "hardship" postings, those jobs have not usually required that they wear flak jackets with their pin- striped suits. But in the last five years, the For- eign Service landscape has shifted. Thanks to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the White House is calling for more U.S. civilians to head not just to those countries, but also to some of their most hostile regions - including Iraq's volatile Anbar province - to try to establish democratic institutions and help in reconstruction. That plan is pro- voking unease and apprehension at the State Department and at other federal agencies. Many federal employees have outright refused repeated requests that they go to Iraq, while oth- ers have demanded that they be assigned only to Baghdad and not be sent outside the more secure "Green Zone," which includes the U.S. embassy and Iraqi government ministries. And while Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice maintained yesterday that State Department employees were "volunteering in large numbers" for difficult posts, including Iraq, several department employees said that those who have signed up tend to be younger, more entry-level types, and not seasoned diplomats. The reluctance highlights a problem with the administration's new strategy for Iraq, which calls on U.S. diplomats to take challeng- es on a scale unmatched anywhere else in the world, when the lack of security on the ground outside the Green Zone makes it one of the last places people, particularly those with families, want to go. Steve Kashkett, vice president of the American Foreign Service Association, the professional orga- nization that represents State Department employees, said that "our people continue to show great courage in volunteering for duty in Iraq." But Kashkett added, "there remain legitimate questions about the ability of unarmed civilian dip- lomats to carryout a reconstruction and democracy-building mission in the middle of an active war zone." The issue flared this week when Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates testified at a Senate hearing that he shared the concerns of officers who complained about a request from Rice's office that military person- nel temporarily fill more than one- third of 350 new jobs in Iraq that the State Department is supposed to be responsible for. The New York Times reported yesterday that senior military offi- cials were upset at the request and told President Bush and Gates that the new Iraq strategy could fail unless more civilian agencies step forward quickly to carry out plans for reconstruction and political development. David Satterfield, the State Department's senior adviser for Iraq,told reporters during a telecon- ference that the State Department's request was only for temporary help and for non-State Department posi- tions that would probably be filled by contractors anyway. Emsrov, q Evile isorepiiniloeiy biiMoromany Fud, ipritoits suppnortoiiMMASaoi006-07 SnOO law 797 A6146 4rq4 'ii1R To play: Complete the grid so that every row, column rl