The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, February 14, 2007 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS BAGHDAD * Iraq to seal borders with Syria and Iran in crackdown The Iraqi commander of the Baghdad security crackdown announced yesterday that Iraq will close its borders with Syria and Iran and ordered the return of unlawfully seized homes, as part of the drive to end the violence that has threatened to divide the capital along sectarian lines. Ahead of the crackdown, anti- American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr fled Iraq for Iran some weeks ago and is believed to be in Tehren where he has family, a senior U.S. official said yesterday. Addressing the nation on behalf of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, Lt. Gen. Abboud Gambar also said Baghdad's nighttime curfew would be expanded by an hour and permits allowing civilians to carry weapons in public would be suspended dur- ing all of the operation, which he suggested could last weeks. WASHINGTON North Korea agrees to dismantle its nuclear weapons The Bush administration called a deal to begin dismantling North Korea's nuclear weapons program a breakthrough, but the North's history of broken promises kept the celebrations to a minimum. There was worry, too, that accommodation of North Korea would encourage brinksmanship by Iran or other would-be nuclear states. The bargain among six nations gives North Korea energy, food and other aid in exchange for shutter- ing its main nuclear reactor. It does not expressly require the North to give up existing weapons or test- ing now, and the agreement does not spell out how negotiators will resolve issues that have derailed previous pacts. President Bush, who once labeled North Korea part of an "axis of evil," said the bargain is a promising first step toward get- ting rid of the North's nuclear weapons. DETROIT Delphi Corp. posts dramatic losses Delphi Corp. said yesterday it lost $2 billion in the third quarter, blaming half the loss on the cost of paying about 20,000 unionized workers to leave the struggling auto parts maker. The net loss of $3.51 per share was worse than the $788 million, or $1.40 per share, that Delphi lost in the same period of 2005. The Troy-based company, which is operating under Chapter 11 bank- ruptcy protection, said it lost about $1 billion to charges associated with shrinkingits U.S. hourly work force. Delphi, in a filing with the Secu- rities and Exchange Commission, also said it lost $4.6 billion during the first nine months of 2006, and the company attributed $2.9 billion of that to costs associated with the work force reduction. The nine-month loss was worse than the $1.5 billion it lost in the first nine months of 2005, accord- ing to its filing. NEW ORLEANS Tornado ravages recovering city Eighteen months after Hur- ricane Katrina, Stella Chambers' modest red-brick house had finally been repaired, and she was wait- ing for one last utility hookup to move back in. But the 85-year-old woman never made it. A tornado tore through her neighborhood in the city's Gentil- ly neighborhood before daybreak yesterday, flattening her house, ripping apartthe front-yard FEMA trailer in which she was living, and killing her. At least 29 people were injured, including Chambers' daughter, Gail, as the twister heaped more misery on neighborhoods still try- ing to recover from Katrina. The storm destroyed at least 50 FEMA trailers and dozens of homes. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 200 Number of media members cre- dentialed to cover former Mas- sachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney's presidential announcement in Dearborn yesterday, The New York Times political blog reported. More than 600 reporters and pundits were credentialed by Sen. Barack Obama's staff for his presidential announcement on Saturday. A SHELTERED PATH k -3 PETER SCHOTTENFELS/Daily A stream of people makes their way from the Medical Campus across an overpass across Glen Street to a parking structure dur- ing a snowstorm yesterday. Al- Qaida number two calls Bush an 'alcoholic' CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Al-Qaida's Bush, who is now 60, has No. 2 said President Bush was an acknowledged he had a problem alcoholic and a lying gambler who with drinking but gave up alcohol wagered on Iraq and lost, accord- when he was 40 years old. ing to a new audiotape released The 41-minute audiotape could yesterday. not immediately be authenticated Ayman al-Zawahri said in the but was seen by The Associated tape that Bush has been forced to Press on a Web site commonly used admit his failure in Iraq after he by insurgent groups and carried was "stubborn" and repeated the the logo of the multimedia arm of "lie, which he became addicted al-Qaida, as-Sahab. to, that he is winning" in Iraq and The audio was accompanied by Afghanistan. a video that showed a still picture "Bush suffers from an addictive of al-Zawahri and featured an Eng- personality, and was an alcoholic. lish translation of the audio at the I don't know his present condition' bottom of the screen. ... but the one who examines his Transcripts of the audiotape personality finds that he is addict- were first released by two U.S. ed to two other faults _ lying and groups that track extremist mes- gambling," al-Zawahri said in the sages, the SITE Institute and the audiotape. IntelCenter. university unions- almost as good as [remember your sweetheart!] M University llil Unions TICKETS From page IA DEALING WITH DRIVERS Writing tickets does not always make Rogers the most popular per- son on the street. "It's not personal," she said. "I don't know whose car I'm writing a ticket to." Rogers said that if she is approached while writing a ticket, she isn't going to tear it up. "I don't want to make them feel bad," she said. "I just am doing my job." There are some who don't appre- ciate her line of work. Frustrated and angry drivers often insult her. "I have been called everything but a child of God," she said with a laugh. "They don't know what kind of person Ilam. They think we're all just parking Nazis." Rogers said she is not out to get anyone, though. She doesn't wait for meters to expire or hide behind cars to catch someone down ontheir luck. "I have people say that I'm hid- ing behind a meter, and if you look at me you can see that's very hard to do," she said with a smile. THE REWARD "My favorite part is some of the people I meet," Rogers said. Trade gap breaks record again WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. trade deficit set a record for a fifth straight year, and the imbalance with China soared to an all-time high as well. TheBush administration pledged to keep pursuing its free-trade poli- cies, while Democrats now control- ling Congress demanded a change in course. The gap between what the U.S. sells abroad and what it imports rose to a record $763.6 billion last year, up 6.5 percent from the previ- ous record of $716.7 billion in 2005, the Commerce Department report- ed yesterday. For December, the deficit jumped a bigger-than-expected 5.3 percent to $61.2 billion. Bush administration officials said the wider deficits were pri- marily a factor of faster growth in the United States and warned against pursuing policies that would erect protectionist trade barriers in this country. "Our focus is on growing our exports, growing our economy, reducing our unemployment and keeping inflation in check," Com- merce Secretary Carlos Gutier- rez said in an interview from New Delhi, India. Treasury Secretary Henry Paul- son announced he was naming Alan F. Holmer, a pharmaceutical company executive and a former trade official during the Reagan administration, to be his deputy in charge of a newhigh-level strategic dialogue with China that he insti- tuted in December. Paulson said the next meetings would be May 23-24 in Washington and that he was in frequent contact with the head of the Chinese dele- gation, Vice Chairman Wu Yi, in an effort to achieve results to lessen trade tensions. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and 13 other top House Demo- crats sent Bush a letter saying the new trade figures underscored the urgency for a course change on trade. "The consequences of these persistent and massive trade defi- cits include not only failed busi- nesses, displaced workers, lower real wages and rising inequality, but also permanent devastation of our communities," the Democrats said. They noted that more than 3 mil- lion manufacturing jobs have been lost since Bush took office, with about one-third of those losses attributed to the rising deficit in manufactured goods. The Democrats urged Bush to pursue more cases against unfair trade practices including a chal- lenge before the World Trade Orga- nization against currency practices of both China and Japan. Rogers has several stories about the kind people in Ann Arbor, espe- cially University athletes. A few years ago, she almost towed the car of Chris Perry, then a star Michigan running back who now plays for the Cincinnati Bengals. He came running out of the building right before his car would have been towed but kept his cool. He called his mom for help paying the ticket before the car was towed. "He was just so nice about it," Rogers said. ALL IN A DAY'S WORK Rogers writes about 100 tickets each day. The most she has ever written in a day is more than 200. Officers patrolling areas with time-limited parking keep track of violators by marking tires with chalk. When an officer returns after the posted limit, tires that are still marked receive tickets. Rogers prefers using sidewalk chalk because it is bigger and easier to see. If she runs out, though, there is a stash of yellow Crayola black- board chalk in the center console of the blue Dodge Neon car that the city provides her while she's on duty. Chalk is also used to mark tick- eted cars whose owners don't move them in time. When Rogers returns from her rounds, she may mark certain tick- eted cars that haven't been moved since she wrote the citation. If the car hasn't relocated by the time she checks back, she can issue another ticket for exceeding the allowed time limit. Meters explic- itly state that even if more coins are added, a car may not stay in the same spot over its given time, Cars on city streets can't be left in the same spot for more than 48 hours or they can be towed. TOOLS OF THE TRADE Officers use handheld ticket machines made by Casio, which replaced an antiquated version of the machine a few months ago. To issue a ticket, an officer enters a vehicle's license plate number, the make of the vehicle, the street, the meter number and the violation into the machine. Depending on the violation, the officer can choose to enter comments as well. The handheld machine also has a camera. An officer can take a photo of an infraction and produce it if the ticket is appealed. Despite being perhaps one of the most unwelcome sights on city streets, Rogers said she doesn't mind her work. "People think I'm crazy taking this job. But it's worked out. I like it," Rogers said. (73#2 6K36J-3379 Excel. Explore. Experience.Empower.... ..use yourleadership skills, knowledge and experience JOin the largest student-run arts and programming organizaion on campus QACntribtor? Now accepting applications for Executive Board positions for 2007 - 2008 * President * Vice-President of Marketing * Executive Vice-President * Vice-President of External Relations * Vice-President of Finance Applications are due February 16, 2007 and can be downloaded at www.umich.edu/-uac What do Udo. hAG www.umich.edu/ uac The University Activities Center A