0 0 0 S Wednesday, April 13, 2 3B news in review Five of the most talked-about stories of the week, ranked in ascending order of actual importance Acclaimed film director Sidney Lumet died on Saturday at age 86. Lumet, who never received an Oscar for direction but received an honorary Academy Award in 2005, worked on famous films "12 Angry Men" and "Network." An explosion in a Minsk, Belarus subway station claimed 11 lives and injured more than 100 people during rush hour on Monday. President Aleksandr Lukashenko suggested that the blast was an act of terrorism. Opposition forces captured former Ivory Coast leader Laurent Gbagbo on Monday. Gbagbo, who has been decried as a war criminal, refused to relinquish power to the recog- nized victor of last year's presiden-. tial election, Alassane Ouattara. On Tuesday, Japanese officials increased the severity level of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station radiation leak from 5 to 7 - the most severe level for a crisis. The Cheronbyl disaster in 1986 also received this rating. France introduced a law on Mon- day that bans wearing full face veils in public. France is the first European country impose the ban. Individuals who violate the law will be fined $216 and must attend a "citizenship course." r0TTT T7I , 2, ,, 3 ,4N 15 11 7 i . - 1 ... quotes of the week "When some people see UFOs, it changes them. It alters their belief system, it challenges a lot offwhat they believe." JOSEPH CAPP, RETIRED COMPUTER CONSULTANT, explaining his creation of a 24-hour telephone hotline for reporting UFO sightings. "It sends exactly the wrong signal at a time when you are supposed to be transitioning away from abusive practices combined with official denial and failure to investigate." HEBA MORAYEF, RESEARCHER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH, on Egyptian blogger Maikel Nabil's, who on Monday received a three-year prison sentence for criticizing the military on his blog. the rules from the archives Do the 'do No. 337: Interships are great, but spending your summer sleeping in and drinking every day is better. No. 338: Everyone should have sex in the stacks before they graduate. No. 339: Ask for a really outrageous graduation gift. It's worth a try. COURTESY OF FICKF Some things on campus are rare: heat waves. George Clooney sightings. Rich Rodriguez fan clubs. And the list wouldn't be complete, of course, withou' the proverbially marginalized "mullet" hairstyle. But there's one relatively recent documentation of this 80s fad seeing the light of day: Back in 2007, University student Stephen Krause snagged a headline for his Bowie-like 'do ("Campus Characters: The Man Behind the Mullet," 2/15/2007). As The Michigan Daily reported, the then-Engineering sophomore had been a mullet enthusiast from an early age: "(Krause)has had the same hairstyle since he was 6 years old. His smooth, blond hair is cut about an even inch, except above the nape of his neck, where the hair flows past his shoulders." Athough Krause - appropriately nicknamed "Mullet Steve" - received compli- ments for his hairstlye, not all students were tolerant. According to the article: one student offered him money to let her cut his hair. He declined." by the numbers COURTESY OF THE LOSANGELES TIP Dollars a woman in France will pay for breaking Thousands of dollars in fines an individ- Millions of Muslims who live in France the country's recently imposed ban on wearing ual will pay for forcing a woman to wear France has the largest Muslim populati veils in public. a veil. in Europe.