The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, September 8, 2008 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, September 8, 2008 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON " White House intervenes to save Fannie, Freddie The Bush administrationseized control yesterday of troubled mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, aiming to stabilize the housing market turmoil that is threatening financial markets and the overall economy. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is betting that providing fresh capital to the two firms will eventually lead to lower mortgage rates, spur homebuying demand and slow the plunge in home pric- es that has ravaged many areas of the country. The huge potential liabilities facingeach company, as a result of soaring mortgage defaults, could cost taxpayers tens of billions of dollars, but Paulson stressed that the financial impacts if the two companies had been allowed to fail would be far more serious. KEY WEST, Florida Gulf Coast, tired from evacuations, prepares for Ike With powerful Hurricane Ike on an uncertain course toward the Gulf of Mexico, many on these low-lying islands took a wait-and- see approach to evacuation orders yesterday, perhaps a harbinger of the attitudes to come from Louisi- ana and Texas residents returning . from an arduous evacuation and already showing signs of "hurri- cane fatigue." Forecasts show ke crossing Cuba and skirting Key West by to- morrow on a trek to the warm wa- ters of the Gulf of Mexico, slowly strengthening to perhaps Catego- ry 3 strength on its way to a land- fall late in the week somewhere between the Florida Panhandle and the Texas coast. And once again, New Orleans - still recovering from the weak- er-than-expected Gustav - is squarely in the crosshairs. CAIRO At feast32-feared dead in rock slide- Hopes diminished yesterday for finding any survivors among hun- dreds of people believed trapped " beneath massive boulders that I destroyed an impoverished neigh- borhood on Cairo's outskirts, kill- ing at least 32 people, including whole extended families. Anger and resentment mounted " as authorities failed for a second day to get heavy machinery into the devastated shantytown to try to clear the large slabs that split away from the Muqattam cliffs early Saturday. Survivors among the 100,000 residents of the Dewi- ka slum were also left to spend the night without shelter, despite gov- ernment promises to provide it. TRENTON, New Jersey Obese children more at risk to suffer liver damage In a new and disturbing twist on the obesity epidemic, some overweight teenagers have severe liver damage caused by too much body fat, and ahandful have need- ed liver transplants. Many more may need a new liver by their 30s or 40s, say experts warning that pediatri- cians need to be more vigilant. The condition, which can lead to cirrhosis and liver failure or liver cancer, is being seen in kids in the United States, Europe, Aus- tralia and even some developing countries, according to a surge of recent medical studies and doc- tors interviewed by The Associ- ated Press. The American Liver Founda- tion and other experts estimate 2 percent to 5 percent of American. children over age 5, have the con- dition, called nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. - Compiled from Daily wire reports S U.. DE ATHS 91455 Number of American service members who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. There were no deaths identified yesterday. Men arrested for stealing 3 tons of steel from North Campus lab Abduction suspect arraigned, charged Steel turned up at. scrap yard in Wayne By JILLIAN BERMAN Daily StaffReporter Wayne County Police arrested two men on Tuesday suspected of stealing nearly three tons of stain- less steel stored near the Lay Auto- motive Lab on North Campus. University Police spokes- woman Diane Brown said thieves didn't steal the steel all at once. The theft was preorted to police Aug. 26. "These two men and perhaps others - we don't know - took it over the course of apparently multiple occasions," she said. Linden Vann of Wayne and Matthew Reusch of Westland were charged with two counts of larceny greater than $20,000 and two counts of larceny of greater than $10,000, after it was discov- ered that they sold the steel to scrap yards, the Ann Arbor News reported Friday. The men stole 11 pieces of steel weighing about 5,900 pounds, according to the report. Brown said the steelwas recov- ered two days after the crime was reported. Brown said the investigation contacted several scrap yards in southeast Michigan before deter- mining that the stolen steel was in Wayne. Brown said she didn't know how much they sold the steel for. According to court records, the suspects were released on bond until Sept. 17, when they're scheduled for a preliminary hear- ing. Both entered not guilty pleas Tuesday and requested public defenders. Machine to simulate Big Bang-results Ann Arbor man held on $1-million bond By SARA LYNNE THELEN Daily StaffReporter A man suspected of attempting to abduct and assault two women last Sunday on Ann Arbor's south side was arraigned and charged Friday on two counts of kidnapping and two counts of assault with intent to commit criminal sexual conduct. The suspect, 40-year-old Ann Arbor resident Timothy Jon Case, is being held on a $1 million bond in the Washtenaw County Jail as he awaits his Sept.17 pretrial examination. Case, a local contractor, also faces charges for the delivery and manufacture of marijuana. Detec- tives found about a dozen marijuana plants in his home the day of his arrest. Case lives with relatives on Burton Road, two miles from the intersection of Packard Street and Independence Boulevard, where the crimes occurred. In the first incident, an attacker pulled a 20-year-old University student into the bushes on Inde- pendence Boulevard around 8:30 p.m. on Sunday. She fought free and ran away to a nearby. home. About an hour later, a man drove up beside a 16-year-old girl jogging in the same area, punched her several times and pulled her into his van. She jumped from the vehicle when he began to drive away. Police suspect the same man was responsible for both assaults. Ann Arbor Police Officer Eric Ronewicz said he recognized the descriptions of Case from a prior arrest. Ronewicz said he visited Case's home on a hunch Monday and found a van in the driveway that matched the victim descriptions. He then tipped off detectives, who arrested Case in his home two days later. Ross School of Business graduate student Nemanja Babic, who lives off Independence Boulevard, said he and his friends were shocked to learn about the crimes. "We had a party here that night, and everyone freaked out because this is Ann Arbor," he said. "This doesn't happen inAnn Arbor." Ann Arbor resident Mike Mahon, who lives on Independence Boule- vard with his wife and 3-month-old son, said the incidents were a harsh reminder for the community not to take the neighborhood's safety for granted. "It's been a hot topic of conver- sation in the neighborhood for the past week," he said. "You learnfrom these things, and it helps to realize that even though it's an isolated incident, that the potential is there and that you have to be safe." . GENEVA (AP) - It has been called an Alice in Wonderland investigation into the makeup of the universe - or dangerous tampering with nature that could spell doomsday. Whatever the case, the most powerful atom-smasher ever built comes online Wednesday, eagerly anticipated by scientists worldwide who have awaited this moment for two decades. The multibillion-dollar Large Hadron Collider will explore the tiniest particles and come ever closer to re-enacting the big bang, the theory that a colossal explo- sion created the universe. The machine at CERN, the EuropeanOrganizationfor Nucle- ar Research, promises scientists a closer look at the makeup of mat- ter, filling in gaps in knowledge. The first beams of protons will be fired around the 17-mile tunnel to test the controlling strength of the world's largest superconduct- ing magnets. It will still be about a month before beams traveling in opposite directions are brought together in collisions that some skeptics fear could create micro "black holes" and endanger the planet. , The project has attracted researchers of 80 nationalities, some 1,200 of them from the United States, which contributed $531 million of the project's price tag of nearly $4 billion. "This only happens once a gen- eration," said Katie Yurkewicz, spokeswoman for the U.S. contin- gent at the CERN project. "People are certainly very excited." The collider at Fermilab out- side Chicago could beat CERN to some discoveries, but the Geneva equipment, generating seven times more energy than Fermilab, will give it big advantages. The CERN collider is designed to push the proton beam close to the speed of light. Iraqi lawmakers return to session after summer recess With legis BAGH makers this we' approvir signing security steps in1 lasting p The failed la providin much to settle, this fall after Kurds objected to a power-sharing arrangement for the lature will have oil-rich area around Kirkuk, which they want to incorporate into their busy start self-ruled region in the north. U.N. and Iraqi election offi- cials warn the balloting cannot be IDAD (AP) - Iraqi law- held this year unless parliament end their summer break approves the measure quickly after ek facing urgent tasks of it reconvenes Tuesday. ng a new election law and But weeks of private meetings off on a still-unfinished and contacts among Sunni Arab, pact with the U.S. - key Shiite and Kurdish lawmakers have laying the foundation for a failed to produce any breakthrough 'eace. on the issue, and it was unclear 275-member legislature whether the bill would win speedy st month to approve a law approval. ig for provincial elections U.S. and Iraqi officials believe new elections in Iraq's 18 prov- inces are an essential step to build- ing a long-term peace among the country's rival religious and ethnic communities. Voters will choose provincial councils, which wield considerable power at the local level. Many Sunnis and some Shiites boycotted the last provincial elec- tion, in January 2005, enabling Shi- ite religious parties and the Kurds to win a disproportionate share of power at the expense of the Sunnis. However, deputy parlia- ment speaker Khalid al-Attiyah expressed doubt that the assembly would be able to approve the elec- tion bill quickly. "I am frustrated with the perfor- mance of parliament," al-Attiyah, a Shiite, told The Associated Press on Sunday. "There are many laws that should have been passed, but par- liament failed to do so. The election bill is still a problem, and we are pressed for time." He said, that if the legislature can't enact a new law, the current provincial administrations will be "illegitimate" and "this will lead us into a new political crisis." Sunni lawmaker Adnan al-Du- laimi said further delays in the elec- tion bill "will create a new crisis, a big one" because political groups that were organized after the last balloting will feel they are being denied a role in government. During the upcoming session, parliament must also ratify a secu- rity agreement between the U.S. and Iraq governing the status of U.S. troops here after the U.N. Security Council mandate expires at the end of the year. But the talks have hit an impasse over U.S. insistence on retaining sole legal jurisdiction over Ameri- can troops in Iraq and differences over a schedule for the departure of the U.S. military. Iraqi officials want all foreign troops out by the end of 2011. WANT TO WORK FOR THE DAILY? COME TO ONE OF OUR MASS MEETINGS. 420 MAYNARD ST. TONIGHT, 8 P.M. WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 17, 8 P.M. * U DoKUu Offer expires September 15, 2008! Get a free iPod after rebate.* And save every day with your education discount. 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