2A - Monday, October 28, 2013 MONDAY: TUESDAY: WEDNESDAY: THURSDAY: FRIDAY: This Week " Professor Profiles In Other Ivory Towers Alumni Profiles Photos of the Week ZAM-TH ROW-I Halloween vandals wreak havoc J| The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com ANDREW WEINER KIRBY VOIGTMAN Editor in Chief easiness Manager 734-41e-4115 ext. 1252 734-4le-4ils ext. 1241 anweiner@michigandaily.com kvoigtman@michigandaily.com Local vandals were active $10 million building. looting and destroying property The school's outdated facilities on Halloween-Homecoming were making it difficult to contin- weekend. ue to be a top program, William A janitor reported that 10 Mann, the Dean of the Dental "youngsters" attempted to steal School, said. The proposed build- hoses and fire extinguishers ing plan allowed the school to from Angell Hall on Halloween increase its enrollment from 350 night. By the time the police to 600 undergraduates, whom arrived, the suspects had disap- the school had a program for at peared. the time. The following night, groups "The present dentistry building roaming the street destroyed is the second oldest in the coun- unguarded Homecoming dis- try, and when it was provided in plays. 1908, research space was given little consideration," Mann said. fessors debated former President Richard Nixon's impeachment. The professors discussed constitutional interpretation in terms of the necessary basis for impeachment of the president. Law Prof. Robert Burt advo- cated a limited interpretation, claiming that the president should only be impeached for breaking criminal law. Law Prof. Richard Lempert disagreed, say- ing that a president's violation of the nation's trust could be, in a looser interpretation, considered a political crime and a basis for impeachment. -AMABEL KAROUB crecons@mihigadiy.om eoonoignat~o Dinlne SalesFiae oneineads@michigandaily.omx feee xoiadinx News Tips news@michigandaily.com Letterstothe Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com SportsetinePhotographylSectin photo michigandailycom Classified Sales classified@michigandaily.com Finance finance@michigandaily.com 0 FIFTY YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (OCT. 31,1963) PATRICK BARRoN/Daily A fan throws his shoe offtthe Zamboni at the hockey game against Boston University Friday night. FORTY YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (OCT. 271973) The School of Dentistry pro- posed the construction of a new Five University Law School pro- CRIME NOTES CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Back it up WHERE: 2400 Hayward WHEN: Thursday at about 10:30 a.m. WHAT: A vehicle backing out of a driveway hit anoth- er car in the street, result- ing in a minor accident, University Police reported. There were no injuries, but there was some damage to one of the vehicles. All kinds of bad Depression Cecilia WHERE: 1900 block of Geddes WHEN: Friday at about 2:20 a.m. WHAT: A subject was arrested for operating while intoxicated, resisting arrest, damage to a police vehicle and possession of a false driver's license, University Police reported. discussion Munoz talk WHAT: Former NFL ath- lete Eric Hipple and MLS athlete Blake Wagner will share their experiences and work with depression. WHO: Council for Disabil- ity Concerns WHEN: Today at 12 p.m. WHERE: School of Social Work Building That guy at the Study 'til you Research party drop lecture WHERE: Angell Hall WHERE: Shapiro Under- WHEN: Thursday at 10:15 graduate Library WHAT: Emily M p.m. WHEN: Friday at about vost is the keynote WHAT: An intoxicated 3:15 a.m. at the 7th Annuall subject was escorted from WHAT: An ambulance was Bipolar Research: Angell Hall after reports requested after a subject Lecture and willd the subject was bothering passed out in the library diesease research, people, University Police lobby but said subject left cifically highlight reported. The subject was before the officer arrived, centered computir given a verbal warning. University Police reported. WHO: Depressio WHEN: Today frc MORE ONLINE Love Crime Notes? p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Get moreonlineatnmichigandaily.com/blogs/The Wire WHERE: Rache Building ower Pro- e speaker Pretcher Fund dicuss the and spe- human- ing n Center om 1:00 l Upjohn WHAT: Cecilia Munoz, assistant to the president and director of domestic policy council, discusses immigration reform. WHO: Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy WHEN: Today from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. WHERE: Weill Hall Fellowship info session WHAT: Students looking to apply to the Carnegie Jr. Fellows Program for inter- national peace promotion can learn more about the fellowship and ask ques- tions. WHO: The Career Center WHEN: Today at 4 p.m. WHERE: Students Activi- ties Building A dog in Wenatchee, Wash. started a fire reaching for treats off the counter and accidentally turning on the stove, the AP reported. The fire caused smoke damage and the dog was revived with mouth-to- snout resuscitation. Wayne State University expanded in-state tuti- tion for students living in the Great Lake states - Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania - and Ontario, Canada. >> FOR MORE, SEE OPINION, PAGE 4 Velvet Underground member Lou Reed died Sunday at the age of 71, the Washington Post reported. The punk icon died of issues related to his liver transplant, according to his agent, and had been sick for several months. EDITORIAL STAFF MatthewSlovin ManagingEditor mjslovin@michigandaily.com AdamRubenfireManagingNewsEditor arube@michigandaily.com SENIOR NEWS EDITORS: Alicia Adamczyk, Katie Burke, Peter Shahin, K.C. 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One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2.Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via US.malare$110.Winter term (ianuary through Apri)is $115, yearong (September through April) is $195. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscriptionrate.On-campus subscriptionsfor falertr mare$3.Subscriptionsmust beprepaid. The Michigan Daiy is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. Cousin admitted fatally stabbing mom, four kids Syria files weapons report amid renewed violence Suspect still in custody after resisting arrest and assaulting officer NEW YORK(AP) - A Chinese immigrant who neighbors said struggled to survive in America was arrested Sunday on five counts of murder in the stabbing deaths of his cousin's wife and her four children in their Brook- lyn home - using a butcher knife. The suspect, 25-year-old Min- gdong Chen, implicated himself in the killings late Saturday in the Sunset Park neighborhood, police said. "They were cut and butchered with a kitchen knife," said Chief of Department Philip Banks III. Two girls, 9-year-old Linda Zhuo and 7-year-old Amy Zhuo, were pronounced dead at the scene, along with the youngest child, 1-year-old William Zhuo - all attacked in a back bedroom, policesaid. Their brother, 5-year- old Kevin Zhuo, and 37-year-old mother, Qiao Zhen Li, were taken to hospitals, where they were also pronounced dead. Chen is a cousin of the chil- dren's father and had been stay- ing at the home for the past week or so, Banks said. Chen came to the United States from China in 2004, the chief said, but neighbors say he could never hold down a job. "He made a very soft comment that since he came to this coun- try, everybody seems to be doing better than him," the chief said. "We're not really sure what that means." The chief said Chen still speaks only Mandarin Chinese despite being in the U.S. for almost a decade. On Saturday night, Chen apparently had been acting in'a "suspicious" way that concerned Li, Banks said. She tried to call her husband, who wasn't home, but couldn't reach him. Banks said Li then called her mother-in-law in China, who also was unsuccessful in reach- ing her son. The mother-in-law reached out to her daughter in the same Brooklyn neighbor- hood, Banks said. She and her husband came to the house and banged on the door. When it opened, they faced a grisly sight: a man they didn't know, covered with blood. The couple called 911, and officers investigating another matter nearby responded quickly, Banks said. "It's a scene you'll never for- get," he said. The victims had wounds in their necks and torsos. Chen was in custody and not immediately available to com- ment; it was not clear whether he had a lawyer. Banks said he had at first resisted arrest and, while being processed, assaulted a police officer. Bob Madden, who lives near- by, was out walking his dog Sat- urday night when he saw a man being escorted from the two- family brick.house by police. He was barefoot, wearing jeans, and "he was staring, he was expres- S7sionless," Madden said. Yuan Gao, a cousin of the 1 2 mother, came by the house Sun- day and stood on the street, along with the neighborhood's mostly 8 7 9 Chinese residents. Some said that at Chen's latest 5 1 2 temporary home, days before the brutal killings, late-night argu- 4 7 2ments were loud enough to be heard outside. Gao said Chen was emotion- 9ally unstable. "He's crazy," she said. 1 3 Gao also said Chen kept get- ting fired from various restau- I 28 rant jobs after only a few weeks. Fire department spokesman Jim Long said emergency work- 4ers responded just before 11 p.m. to a 911 call from a person stabbed at the residence in Sun- set Park, a working-class neigh- borhood. Chemical weapons set to be destroyed by mid-2014 in 'ambitious timeline' THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) - Syria has filed details of its poison gas and nerve agent program and an initial plan to destroy it to the world's chemical weapons watchdog, the organi- zation said Sunday. The Organization for the Prohi- bition ofChemical Weapons said in a statement that Syria completed its declaration as part of a strict and ambitious timeline that aims to eliminate the lethal stockpile by mid-2014. Thegroupbased in The Hague, said Syria made the declaration Thursday. The announcement pro- vides "the basis on which plans are devised for a systematic, total and verified destruction of declared chemical weapons and production facilities," the group said. Such declarations made to the organization are confidential. No details of Syria's program were released. Syria already had given pre- liminary details to the OPCW when it declared it was joining the organization in September. The move warded off possible U.S. military strikes in the after- math of an Aug. 21 chemical weapon attack on a Damascus suburb. Syria denies responsibil- ity for the deadly attack. OPCW inspectors were hast- ily dispatched to Syria this month and have visited most of the 23 sites Damascus declared. They also have begun overseeing destruction work to ensure that machines used to mix chemicals and fill munitions with poisons are no longer functioning. Syria is believed to possess around 1,000 metric tons of chemical ,weapons, including mustard gas and sarin. It has not yet been decided how or where destruction of Syria's chemical weapons will happen. Damascus' declara- tion includes a general plan for destruction that will be consid- ered by the OPCW's 41-nation executive council on Nov. 15. Norway's foreign minis- ter announced Friday that the country had turned down a U.S. request to receive the bulk of Syria's chemical weapons for destruction because it doesn't have the capabilities to complete the task by the deadlines given. The announcement came among renewed fighting in Syria. Al-Qaida-linked rebels battled government troops for control of the Christian town of Sadad north of Damascus, activists said.. The rebels have been trying to seize the town for the past week, and residents in the rebel-held western neighborhoods of Sadad are trapped in their homes, said Rami Abdurrahman of the Brit- ain-based Syrian Observatory of Human Rights. The rebels appear to have targeted Sadad because of its strategic location near the main highway north from Damascus rather than because it is inhab- ited primarily by Christians. But extremists among the reb- els are hostile to Syria's Chris- tians minority, which has largely backed President Bashar Assad during the conflict. The official Syrian news agen- cy said troops wrested back con- trol of eastern parts of Sadad, but were clashing in other areas. Also Sunday, Syrian Kurdish gunmen were trying to secure their hold over a major border crossing with Iraq after captur- ing the captured the Yaaroubi- yeh -post in northeast Syria on Saturday. Abdurrahman said the Kurdish gunmen were fighting pockets of fighters from extrem- ist rebel groups in southern Yaaroubiyeh. Syria's chaotic more than 2 1 year-old conflict pits Assad's forces against a disunited array of rebel factions. Al-Qaida- linked hard-liners have fought .other rebel groups as well as Kurdish militias who have taken advantage of the government's weakness to cement control over territory dominated by the eth- nic minority. The main Western-backed opposition group, the Syrian National Coalition, accused Iraqi forces of fighting moderate Syr- ian rebels at Yaaroubiyeh, and shelling the area in cooperation with Kurdish militants. Iraq's Interior Ministry spokesman, Saad Maan Ibrahim, rejected the accusations, saying they are "baseless because Iraq and its security forces have noth- ing to do with the fighting at the Syrian border crossing." In neighboring Lebanon, another two people -were killed by sniper fire during fighting between rival sects in the north- ern city of Tripoli, the official state news agency reported. It said that a soldier in the city also died Sunday of his wounds. At least 10 people have been killed since clashes flared earlier this week, security officials said. Syria's. civil war effectively has spread to Lebanon's sec- ond largest city, where it has inflamed tensions between two impoverished Tripoli neighbor- hoods-home to Assad opponents and supporters. The Bab Tabbaneh district is largely Sunni Muslim, like Syr- ia's rebels. The other neighbor- hood Jabal Mohsen mostly has residents of Assad's Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. The latest round of fighting began four days ago. Tensions had been mounting since Oct. 14, when a Lebanese military pros- ecutor pressed charges against seven men, at least one of whom was from Jabal Mohsen, for their involvement in twin bombings near two Sunni mosques in Trip- olionAug.23thatkilled47people. Lebanon shares its northern and eastern border with Syria. Lebanon's Sunni leadership has mostly supported the rebels, while Alawites and Shiites have backed the Assad government. Members of all three sects have gone as fighters to Syria. I 0 I