The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 3, 2013 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, October 3, 2013 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Doctor accused of fraud to stay in jail A Detroit-area cancer doctor accused of intentionally misdi- agnosing patients and ordering unnecessary treatments will remain in jail until trial, a judge said Wednesday after prosecu- tors insisted he might flee to the Middle East. Dr. Farid Fata, in custody since Aug. 6, wanted the judge to lower his $9 million bond to $500,000 and give him a chance to win release. But the decision was worse for the Oakland County O man: No bond. "Obviously there is a presump- tion of innocence ... but the court feels there is a serious risk of flight. The charges are serious," U.S. Dis- trict Judge Paul Borman said. SEATTLE Tesla Model S fire worries investors Flames that engulfed the front end of a Tesla electric car near Seattle also burned in the vehicle's battery pack, making it difficult for firefighters to extinguish the blaze, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press. In an incident report released under Washington state's public records law, firefighters wrote that they appeared to have Tues- day's fire under control, but the flames reignited. Crews found that water seemed to intensify the fire, so they began using a dry chemical extinguisher. After dismantling the front end of the vehicle and puncturing holes in the battery pack, crews used a circular sawto cut an access hole in the front section in order to apply water to the battery, accord- ing to documents. Only then was the fire extinguished. Shares of Tesla Motors Inc. fell more than 6 percent Wednesday after an Internet video showed flames spewing from the vehicle, which Tesla has touted as the safest car in America. CAIRO Disrespecting flag in Egypt could lead to prison Egypt's interim government decided Wednesday that insult- ing the flag and refusing to stand for the national anthem is an offense punishable by law. The decree follows a media fracas sparked by reports that an ultraconservative Islamist sit- ting on a committee to amend the constitution refused to stand for a moment of silence honoring police- men killed on duty during a raid on a militant stronghold last month. It recalled earlier controversy over reports that members of the ultraconservative Salafi trendhave refused to stand for the national anthem for religious reasons. MOSCOW Activists charged with piracy Greenpeace said Wednesday that 14 of its activists who were detained after protesting at a Russian oil platform have been charged with piracy, a crime pun- ishable by up to 15 years in prison. L The environmental activists from Argentina, Brazil, Britain, Finland, the Netherlands, Poland, Russia and Sweden were among 30 people from 18 countries who were on board the Greenpeace ship that was seized by the Rus- sian coast guard following the Sept. 18 protest. Those charged Wednesday by the court in the Arctic city of Murmansk included 13 Greenpeace activists and a free- lance British video journalist. Two of the activists had tried to scale an offshore platform owned by Russian state-controlled ener- gy giant Gazprom to call attention to the environmental risks of drill- ing in Arctic waters. More activists were expected to be formally charged on Thurs- day and Friday, Greenpeace said. All 30 were being held in jails in Murmansk, a port above the Arc- tic Circle. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Candidates for council debate at League forum EBRAHIM NOROOZI/AP Iran's new President Hassan Rouhani waves after swearing in at the parliament, in Tehran, Iran in August. As Iran's diplomatic profile rises with attempts to recalibrate its dealings with Washington, the Gulf rulers will have to make adjustments, too, and that's not such an easy thing for the monarchs and sheiks to swallow. Rouhani savs Iran is open to iscussing nuclear activities Iran's new president has made overtures to the West to cool diplomatic tensions TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Presi- dent Hassan Rouhani said Wednesday that Iran is open to discussing "details" of nuclear activities including the enrich- ment of uranium, hinting that the Islamic Republic is willing to broaden the terms of nego- tiations with world powers. He spoke shortly after receiv- ing support from a wide range of legislators for his policy of reaching out to the West. Rouhani emphasized Teh- ran's longstanding position that its fundamental right to enrich uranium, a key ingredient of nuclear weapons that Iran says it needs for peaceful purposes, is not up for discussion. But his statement was a veiled hint that Iran is open to negotiating on the level of uranium enrichment as part of a deal in return for lifting of sanctions. Rouhani was elected this summer with the backing of centrists and reformists, pledg- ing a new approach to relations with the West. During a visit to New York for the U.N. General Assembly last week, he held a historic phone conversation with President Barack Obama, a gesture aimed at ending three decades of estrangement between the two countries. In his remarks Wednesday after meeting with the Cabinet, Rouhani said Iran has drawn up a "precise plan" to put on the table at the next round of talks with the five permanent mem- bers of the U.N. Security Coun- cil plus Germany in Geneva later this month. "Iran's enrichment right is not negotiable but we must enter into talks to see what would the other side proposes to us about the details," he said. Uranium enrichment is a technology that can be used to produce nuclear fuel but further enrichment makes it suitable for use in nuclear weapons. The U.S. and its allies fear that uranium enrichment could be used in developing a nuclear weapons capacity. Iran says its program is peaceful and geared toward generating electricity and producing isotopes to treat cancer patients. Foreign ministers of Iran and the six-nation group - the U.S., Britain, France, Germany, Rus- sia and China - met in New York last week in a first meeting since Rouhani was elected president in June. The next round of talks willbe held Oct.15-16 in Geneva. Rouhani has reached out to the West, hoping that his policy of moderation and easing ten- sions with the outside world will lead to a nuclear deal. Over 230 lawmakers, out of a total of 290, signed a statement Tuesday to endorse Rouhani's policy of detente and interac- tion, signaling that he enjoys support from both moderates and conservatives within the ruling establishment. Iran's Supreme Leader Aya- tollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say on all state mat- ters, has supported a strategy of "heroic flexibility" in foreign policy, opening the way for Rou- hani's outreach. Rouhani reiterated Iran's pledge that it's not seeking nuclear weapons, and that it will keep its nuclear facilities open to inspection by the Inter- national Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog group. "This is our principle: to keep doors of our nuclear facilities open to IAEA inspection," he said. "We have nothing to hide. Our record is clean and our hands are open." Iran is living under U.N. sanctions as well as tough U.S.- led oil and banking sanctions that have slashed oil exports by half and shut Tehran out of the international financial system. Rouhani said he was not surprised to see Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanya- hu expressing anger at Iran's "charm offensive." Netanyahu on Tuesday called Rouhani "a wolf in sheep's clothing" and accused the lead- er of being "a loyal servant of the regime" who has done nothing to stop Iran's nuclear program since he took office in June. "Such remarks show that we are moving in the right direc- tion," Rouhani said. "When Israel sees that its sword doesn't work and that wisdom has pre- vailed in the world and that the Iranian people's message of peace is heard . they definitely get angry." Spending, safety, transporation among key topics By FARONE RASHEED Daily StaffReporter On Wednesday night, the League of Women Voters hosted a second forum featur- ing Ann Arbor City Council candidates - this time host- ing hopefuls from Wards 1 and 2 - to discuss a range of issues, including city infra- structure, downtown devel- opment and transportation. The event, which comple- ments Tuesday night's debate with representatives from Wards 3 and 5, is in anticipa- tion of the Ann Arbor City Council elections on Nov. 5. In the first round of debates Wednesday, incumbent Sabra Briere (D) faced off indepen- dent candidate Jeff Hayner to garner votes in Ward 1. The two first discussed crosswalk safety, a topic sparked by the recent automo- bile incident in which a bicy- clist was struck at a crosswalk on Plymouth Road. Hayner called for increased education about crosswalk safety backed by more effective police enforcement. "The City Council's respon- sibility should be to put the proper amount of money into educating the public - drivers and pedestrians and bicyclists - so we can share the streets safely," Hayner said. While Briere agreed thatcthe issue needed to be dealt with, she said she wasn't sure how to proceed, since most of the inci- dents stem from irresponsible behavior, rather than unsafe crosswalk policies. Hayner addressed city infrastructure, which he said was overdue for needed repairs to old and unsat- isfactory roads, pipes and draining systems. Briere acknowledged these con- cerns, but pointed to the complexities and realities in approaching such issues. "We could do what people in the past have advised - and that is tear up the streets, put in giant systems to conduct the storm water quickly away from the neighborhoods - but we believe that damages the river. Everything we do is a moving picture," she said. Hayner also supported an expanded regional-bus- transit system, as long as the regional parties would be will- ing and able to pay theirshares equally. Briere acknowledged that there would be a problem expanding the current system without also funding it - a cost decision the community needs to confront and decide on together, she said. In reference to the fund- ing of the Downtown Devel- opment Association, Briere stood by her past position to put a cap on DDA funding. Hayner noted the inevitability of growth, but also acknowl- edged downtown growth as a significant concern to the community. "I think the downtown is getting pretty big, and when I go door-to-door people are concerned about it," Hayner said. Incumbent Jane Lumm (I-Ward 2) debated Demo- crat candidate Kirk Westphal and Independent candidate Conrad Brown, an LSA senior and a member of the newly- formed Mixed-Use Party. Lumm expressed a need to align city spending with the needs of its citizens by focusing on basic amenities and services to the public, including public safety, fixing streets, addressing water and sewage infrastructure, as well as tackling the pedestrian ordinance. "It is all about priorities in so many ways," Lumm said. Westphal, a government consultant and chair of the City Planning Commission, identified long-term economic prosperity, proactive neigh- borhood engagement and an better budgeting process as three focus areas - stress- ing city revenue, community awareness and council prior- ity and efficiency in defining and explaining the city's major problems. "I'm not an advocate or somebody driving for a single issue - I'm a data person," Westphal said. Brown, a member of the newly formed Mixed Use Party and current University student, reiterated the party's most central concerns, includ- ing infrastructure and urban sprawl. He also articulated a need to limit the amount of tax dollars controlled byelect- ed officials in the downtown authority and exercise cau- tion towards investing public funds in private interests. "Growing up in Flint, Mich- igan has given me a unique perspective on what govern- ment and fiscal mismanage- ment will do to a town as once vibrant and proud as Flint," Brown said. U.S . and global stocks fall over fears of protracted gov. shutdown Concerns linger over potential sovereign default if debt ceiling isn't raised NEW YORK (AP) - Fear of a protracted U.S. government shutdown is making global investors increasingly nervous. U.S. and European stock mar- kets fell Wednesday as investors and world leaders worried about the threat to the global econo- my. Europe's top central banker called the partial shutdown "a risk if protracted." Boston's Federal Reserve Bank presi- dent cited the budget battle as a reason the Fed refused to pull back its economic stimulus last month, and President Barack Obama appeared on financial network CNBC to urge Con- gress to pass a budget and avoid derailing the nation's economic recovery. After shrugging off the first day of the shutdown Tuesday, Wall Street made it clear on the second day that it was more and more nervous that the budget fight could turn into something worse, a failure to raise the nation's borrowing limit. "I'm not going out there and beating my chest and saying the world is coming to an end here," said Brad McMillan, the Chief Investment Officer at Common- wealth Financial, an investment adviser. "But we face the pos- sibility for significantly greater disruptions." The looming crisis has been growing for weeks. Republicans in the House of Representatives are insisting that Democrats negotiate over a new health care law as part of the budget talks. Senate Democrats, led by Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, insist that Republicans pass a straightforward tempo- rary funding bill with no strings attached. The political gridlock could prevent the U.S. government from borrowing more money to cover its bills and pay back creditors later this month. The financial market sees that as a disastrous move that could send the U.S. into recession. On Wednesday, the major indexes opened sharply lower, as U.S. lawmak- ers appearing unwilling to yield in their entrenched positions. After Obama summoned Congressional leaders to the White House later in the morning, the market started to recoup some of its losses, but the recovery faded throughout the afternoon. "The markets are sending a loud message to Washing- ton lawmakers to get their act together and resolve the budget crisis," said Peter Cardillo, chief market econ- omist at Rockwell Global Capital. The Dow Jones industrial average ended the day down 58.56 points, or 0.4 percent, at 15,133.14 points. The Stan- dard & Poor's 500 index fell 1.13 points, or 0.1 percent, to 1,693.87. The Nasdaq com- posite declined 2.96 points, or 0.1 percent, to 3,815.02. Six of 10 industry sectors in the S&P 500 fell. Declines were led by the makers of consumer staples and industrial compa- nies. Defense companies, which rely on government contracts for a large part of their revenue, led declines for industrial com- panies. Raytheon fell $1.73, or 2.2 percent, to $76.08. Lockheed Martin dropped $2.42, or 1.9 percent, to $125. Earlier, European Central Bank head Mario Draghi said that the partial U.S. government shutdown was a risk to eco- nomic recoveries in the U.S. and globally. LIKE US ON FACEBOOK. FACEBOOK.COM/MICHIGANDAILY f A j t