2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 4, 1994 DO WE HAVE EVERYONE? .vik* ' ''" "v Fourth-graders return to their buses after attending "Madame Butterfly" at the Power Center yesterday. - Approximately 2,000 Washtenaw County students attended the one-hour performance, ' produced by the New York City Operar Company. t: CHRIS WOLF/Daily - -- - -----------1 ---------- BOSNIA Continued from page 1 unless the Bosnian factions work out apeace settlement. That policy is "not very courageous," he said. The United States does have a large contingent of warplanes in the NATO force that patrols Bosnia's skies. Two U.S. F-16 fighter jets shot down four Serb warplanes that U.N. officials said bombed a Bosnian gov- ernment arms factory Monday about 45 miles northwest of Sarajevo. A NATO threat to use warplanes to bomb Serb artillery around Sarajevo ended the shelling of the besieged capital by forcing the Serbs to remove their tanks, howitzers and mortars. In Washington, the commander of U.S. forces in Europe said the Serbs had almost completely complied with the ultimatum, removing or surren- dering nearly all of the 600 heavy weapons surrounding Sarajevo. "I'd say we're close"to full co pliance, Gen. George Joulwan toll theU.S. Senate Armed Services Com- mittee yesterday. The ultimatum on Sarajevo bol- stered a U.N.-mediated truce that has generally held for three weeks. A U.N. spokesperson, Maj. Jose Labandeira, said Serb troops opened fire with small arms on government troops at the Jewish Cemetery i downtown Sarajevo early yesterda. French peacekeepers in the area then fired a warning volley of machine- gun fire. That followed an incident Wednes- day in which Serbs shot four rocket- propelled grenades at government troops near the cemetery, prompting a gun battle. U.N. officials quoted Serbs as say- ing they fired the grenades becau* government soldiers were violating the truce by reinforcing trenches. I Ninth ISRAEL Read Daily CONFERENCE DAY A Day-Long Academic Program Exploring Social, Cultural and Politcai Aspects of Israel SI ITS Sunday, March 6, 1994 9:30 am - 5:30pm Rackham School of Graduate Studies, The University of Michigan Admission is free. For more information call Hillel: (313)769-0500 i CHINESE CUISINE ife 747-9968 . Fax: 747-9967 Sun: Noon-9pm " M-Th: 11:30am-9:30pm Fri & Sat: 11:30am-10:30pm Take-Out & Delivery Catering Mi Fung (rice noodle dishes) Special Requests Special Lunchtime Combinations Daily Specials 1753 Plymouth Rd. Courtyard Shops U I RU-486 Continued from page 1 tion of the drug here. The administration has given its permission for Population Council to negotiate with Roussel. Limited clini- cal trials already havebeen conducted at the National Institutes of Health and the University of Southern California Medical Center. In addition to France and Britain, Sweden and China also have legalized thepill. If the two parties reach a distribu- tion agreement, the Population Coun- cil will submit an application to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for approval of the drug. FDA officials would not speculate on how long its review might take, but those familiar with the process esti- mate a delay of one to three years. The length of the review process generally depends on the medical priority of the drug, the amount of medical documen- tation available and information gath- ered during the U.S. clinical trials. A potentially life-saving, high pri- ority medication - such as a new AIDS drug - can win approval in as little as 1I months, while reviews of lower priority drugs can take several years, said FDA spokesperson Larry Bachorik. Religious Services ..:®®.A®O ANN ARBOR CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH 1717 Broadway (near N. Campus) 665-0105 SUNDAY: Traditional Service-9 a.m. Contemporary Service-11:15 a.m. Evening Service-6 p.m. Complete Education Program Nursery care available at all services CAMPUS CHAPEL . (Christian Reformed campus ministry) 1236 Washtenaw Ct. 668-7421/662-2402 [one block south of CCRB] EXPLORE and ENJOY your FAITH SUNDAY WORKSHOP: 10 a.m. - Morning Worship "Do you get it?" 6p.m. - No service WEDNESDAY: 9-10 p.m. - R.O.C.K. student gathering Fun, food, provocative discussion. Rev. Don Postema, pastor Ms. Barb O'Day, ministry of students CHRISTIAN LIFE CHURCH Schorling Auditorium School of Education SUNDAY: Service 11 a.m. HURON VALLEY COMMUNITY CHURCH Gay-Lesbian Ministry 741-1174 LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY Lord of Light Lutheran Church, ELCA 801 S. Forest (at Hill), 668-7622 SUNDAY: Worship - 10 a.m. WEDNESDAY: Soup & Supper dinner - 5:30 Study and discussion on human sexuality 6 p.m. Evening Vespers - 7 p.m. John Rollefson and Joyce Miller Campus Ministers MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) 730 Tappan 662-4245 [Across from School of Bus. Admin.] LENTEN MEDITATION SERIES "Instrument of thy Peace" Every Wednesday, 12:15-12:45 p.m. SUNDAY: Worship at 10:45 a.m. An Open and Welcoming Congregation Pastor Russell Fuller ST. MARY'S STUDENT PARISH (A Roman Catholic Parish at U-M) 331 Thompson Street Weekend Liturgies Saturday: 5 p.m. SUNDAY: 8:30 a.m., 10 a.m., 12 noon, 5 p.m., and 7 p.m. FRIDAY: Confessions-4-5 p.m. ISRAEL Continued from page 1 resist being disarmed. The national news agency Itim re- ported that radical settlers in Hebron and the nearby settlement of Kiryat Arba have said they won't surrender their weapons if attempts are made to disarm them. The mosque sniper, New York na- tive Dr. Baruch Goldstein, came from Kiryat Arba, and his grave there has now become a shrine for Israeli ex- tremists. Goldstein was beaten to death by Palestinians after the massacre. Five Kach members were arrested yesterday trying to disrupt aJerusalem demonstration protesting the massa- cre. Two Kach leaders have been de- tained since Sunday. Three others are fugitives. For the Israelis, the crackdown was a radical move on a highly emotive issue. The PLO has demanded Israel dis- mantle some of the 144 Jewish settle- ments that are a source of special fric- tion. These include three in Hebron, where 450 Israelis live among 80,000 Palestinians. CRENSHAW RAPE PREVENTION Continued from page 1 MONT H EY ENTS than 100 - that they found to be par- ticularly sexist in nature. During the ® March 11: Brown-bag week ofMarch21,SAPAC will setup discussion on men in the tables in various sites - such as the feminist movement. UGLi, dormitories and even Borders U March 18: Bown-bag Book Shop - so people can vote on discussion titled "Rape Hype: which is the most sexist. Among the fact vs. Myth." options area local Scorekeepers Sports Bar & Grill ad showing a bikini-clad 0 March 21 and 28: Self woman and an Old Spice ad that con- defense workshop for women.4 fuses the use of the word "no" in a sexual situation. S March 22: Discussion The"winners/losers"ofthecontest asking "!s Gangsta Rap the will be announced April 9, at the Take Jusic of Sexual Violence?" Back the Night rally that concludes Rape Prevention Month. 9 March 29: Social Work Prof. Rabin has dismissed that idea and rejected a PLO demand for U.N. troops to protect Palestinians. Israel has ignored U.N. Security Council resolutions to withdraw from the territories, where 120,000 settles live among 1.8 million Palestinians. "People are sick and tired of us talking peace. They want something on the ground. Any negotiations that don't have settlements high on the agenda will be senseless," chief PLO negotia- tor Saeb Erakat said yesterday. VIGIL Continued from page 1 0 with the events in a peaceful way." Betsey Barlow, a faculty member of the Center for Middle Eastern Stud- ies, said she hopes the vigil will heighten awareness for the difficulties of Pales- tinians in occupied territories. "The atmosphere for violence in the Middle East is very chilling. The candlelight march will bring studene of all religions and all political views together." Abdelall added, "(The massacre) is aterribledisaster, and asilentmarchis the least we can do as students in America." Two e0$ential in.gredient S foelr a perfed t A date and thbi-- ~1961/5C WEEKEND Thursdays in the Daily The Micigan Dily o(15 u-::- 967)is pubisned Ivonaay nrougn Fnay auring mte rallano winter terms oy students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $90. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $160. On-campus subscrip- tions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 764-0552 Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. CfIVOnlAl eVAee a :- sm-02--m- IF--muk - 1- 0%0-2-z t m EDITORIAL STAFF lpssie Halladav Fditnr in Ehipf m cvE9 vnIrs4Q7Inrr 1CbIC F1411CIUClyl CUILUF III 6IIiCi m NEWS David Shepardson, Managing Editor EDITORS: Nate Hurley. Mona Qureshi, Karen Sabgir, Karen Talaski. STAFF: Robin Barry, Carrie Bissey, Janet Burkitt, Hope Calati, Jessica Chaffin James R. Cho Lashawnda Crowe, Lisa Dines. Demetrios Efstratiou, Ronnie Glassberg, Soma Gupta, Michele Hatty, Katie Hutchins, Judith Kafka, Randy Lebowitz, Andrea MacAdanm, Shelley Morrison, James M. Nash, Zachary Raimi, David Rheingold, Rachel Scharfman, Megan Schimpf, Shari Sitron, Mpatanishi Tayari, Lara Taylor, Michelle Lee Thompson, Maggie Weyhing, April Wood, Scot Woods. CALENDAR EDITOR: Andrew Taylor. GRAPHICS: Jonathan Bemndt (Editor). Kimberly Albert. Jennifer Angeles, Andrew Taylor. r 01 EDITORIAL Sam Goodstein, Flnt Wainess, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Julie Becker. Jason Lichtstein. STAFF: Cathy Boguslaski. Eugene Bowen, Jed Friedman, April Groff, Patrick Javid. Jeff Keating, Jim Lasser, Mo Park, Elisa Smith, Allison Stevens, Beth Wierzbinski. LETTERS EDITOR: Randy Hardin. SPORTS Chad A. Satan, Managing Editor EDITORS: Rachel Bachman, Brett Forrest. Tim Rardin, Michael Rosenberg, Jaeson Rosenfeld. STAFF: Bob Abramson, Paul Barger, Tom Bausano, Charlie Breitrose, Aaron Burns, Scott Burton, Marc Diller, Darren Everson, Ravi Gopa, Ryan Herrington, Brett Johnson. Josh Kaplan, Josh Karp, Brent McIntosh, Dan McKenzie, Antoine Pitts, Melinda Roco, J.L. RostarnAbadi, Melanie Schuman, Dave Schwartz, Tom Seeley, Tim Smith, Elisa Sneed. Barry Solienberger. Doug Stevens, Jeremy Strachan, Ken Sugiura. Ryan White. ARTS Meissa Rose Bernardo, NiMa Hodael, Editors EDITORS: Jason Carroll (Theater), Tom Erewine (Music). Rona Kobell (Books), Darcy Lockman (Weekend etc.), John R. Rybock (Weekend etc.), Michael Thompson (Film). STAFF: Jordan Atlas, Nicole Baker, Matt Carlson, Jin Ho Chung, Thomas Crowley, Andy Dolan, Ben Ewy, Johanna Flies, Josh Herrngton, Kristen Knudsen, Karen Lee, Gianluca Montalti. Heather Phares, Scott Plagenhoef, Marni Raitt, Austin Ratner. Dirk Schulze, Liz Shaw, Sarah Stewart, Alexandra Twin, Ted Watts. PHOTO Michelle Guy, Evan Petrie, Editors STAFF. Anastasia Banicki, Mark Friedman, Mary Koukhab, Elizabeth Lippman, Jonathan Lurie, Rebecca Margolis, Judith Perkins, Joe Westrate, Sarah Whiting, Chris Wolf. 01 DISPLAY SA~L E Jan a _Mm ew I1