The shooting occurred Thursday in a lecture hall at Northern Illinois University in DeKalb , Illinois , north of Chicago. The gunman entered the hall dressed in black and carrying a shotgun and three handguns and began firing as students sought cover under desks. One student who escaped unharmed told reporter his life had changed as a result of what he experienced.
Police say the gunman was Steven Kazmierczak,27, a former graduate student in Sociology at the school. Police say he purchased the shotgun and two of the handguns on Saturday, indicating he may have planned the attack in advance, but authorities have not determined a motive for the shooting. Kazmierczak had no criminal record and no history of mental illness. Under Illinois state law he would not been able to purchase a weapon legally if there had been a record of arrests or mental problems. But police say he stopped taking an unspecified medication recently and his behavior became erratic.
In recent months a string of countries, from Japan to Switzerland, Colombia to Israel, have tried to drive down the value of their currencies. Some experts call it competitive devaluation. Others, though, argue that it is nothing short of a currency war and far from boosting global recovery, it threatens to undermine it. So concerned are policymakers that the issue looks set to dominate talks on Friday at a meeting of finance ministers and central bankers.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, which hosts the meeting in Washington, set out the concerns in the Financial Times on Tuesday. There is clearly the idea beginning to circulate that currencies can be used as a policy weapon. Translated into action, such an idea would represent a very serious risk to the global recovery, he said.
The latest round of United Nations climate change talks begins Monday in the coastal resort city of Cancun, Mexico. Representatives from 194 countries are scheduled to attend. Negotiators will try to close the political gap between commitments to reduce carbon emissions made by developed and developing nations.
Last years talks in Copenhagen, Denmark, carried high hopes for a binding global agreement to curb carbon emissions, but in the end delivered a disappointing and loose set of voluntary actions named the Copenhagen Accord. Eighty countries responsible for 80 percent of the worlds carbon emissions signed the accord, agreeing among other things that the global temperature rise should be limited to two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.