2 'elaran One hundred four years of editorial freedom Un40 .Il , , - I Off-campus Entre Plus to debut in February as Mcard By JAMES NASH Daily Staff Reporter Goodbye, Entree Plus. Hello, Mcard. As part of an overhaul of the University's debit card, the University on Friday chris- tened the new Mcard to succeed the popular decade-old Entree Plus program. Mcard is expected to debut in late Febru- ary as a pilot program open to about 500 students. Officials hope Mcard will be in the hands of all University students on the Ann Arbor campus by the beginning of the fall term. Mcard will extend the University's bank- ing system off campus -heeding requests from off-campus merchants that they be al- lowed to participate in the program. The University and First of America signed an agreement in December under which the bank administers the program off campus. While the bank will recover an undeter- mined percentage from each purchase, many merchants interviewed promised not to raise prices to compensate. "If anything, this will help (lower) prices because it will be more competitive," asserted Steve Schindler, store manager of Michigan Book & Supply. "I guarantee we will not raise prices because of it." But Associate Vice President for Business Operations Bob Russell, who is heading the transition to Mcard, said merchants may be dissatisfied with the final rate. "Whatever we come up with is not going to be low enough for the merchants - it's going to be difficult to resolve," he predicted. Mcard will replace current student identi- fication cards and include two magnetic stripes: one linking the card directly to a savings account at First of America and gen- erally used for larger purchases, and the other a separate account - similar to a copy card at the libraries -for smaller purchases. Exist- ing identification cards will be re-encoded to take advantage of the new program. To ensure security, students will have to enter a four-digit personal identification code at the point of purchase. Students would not have to open an ac- count at First of America, Russell said. University and First of America officials expect to approve a logo for Mcard early this week. The card is modeled after Florida State University's debit card, the FSUCard. It has not been decided whether the card could be used for alcohol and tobacco pur- chases. Following delays in negotiations between the University and First of America, both sides said late last week the pilot program should be launched within a month. About 1,000 students - half selected at random and half selected because they use Entrde Plus - will receive letters after spring break asking whether they wish to participate in the pilot program, Russell said. University and bank officials anticipate about 500 will participate. About 20 to 30 businesses also will be named later this week for the pilot program, he said. President *t review record in ad ress From Staff and Wire Reports WASHINGTON - When Presi- dent Clinton delivers his State of the Union Address before the new Re- publican Congress tomorrow night, he faces a daunting and perhaps im- possible ,mission: to convince mil- lions of Americans that he is not the man they think he is. After two years in office, White House aides say, Clinton wants to "reintroduce" himself to voters - to show them he is still the centrist "new Democrat" they supported in 1992, not the tax-and-spend liberal they re- jected in 1994. "We have an opportunity here to restart a conversation with the Ameri- can people ... about what this presi- dent wants to do," White House spokesman Mike McCurry said. "We think it's important to do that." Rep. Lynn Rivers (D-Ann Arbor) said Clinton must speak directly to the American people. "I think he needs to get across ... that he actually un- derstands what people are dealing with on a day-to-day basis and to focus on jobs, good wages and issues that af- fect people directly," Rivers said in a telephone interview from her Ann Arbor home last night. The problem, aides say, is that too many voters have concluded that he is an old-style liberal, and too few are willing to give him credit for the $255 billion in spending cuts he has made - not to mention (as the White House frequently does) a sustained economic recovery and 5.6 million new jobs. Rivers said that the Clinton ad- ministration has had trouble articulat- ing its successes. "Unfortunately, his administration has done a poor job in communicating the victories he's had," she said. Polls confirm this diagnosis: A Washington Post/ABC News poll earlier this month found that 48 per- cent of the public consider Clinton a "tax-and-spend" Democrat, and only 45 percent see him as a budget-cut- ting "new Democrat." Accordingly, aides said, the core of Clinton's third State of the Union speech will be a review of what he considers his unnoticed achievements, along with a renewed pledge to cut the federal budget deficit - and per- haps (but still undecided) a list of new spending cuts to come. While Rivers said she does not know the specific issues Clinton will discuss in his address, she said the president ought to stress concern for the middle class, tuition tax cut pro- posals and unveil elements for his plans for the middle class. At the same time, the president is See CLINTON, Page 2 Arab bombers kill 19 Israeli soldiers Israel seals West Bank and Gaza Strip to Palestinians; Despite bombing, peace talks to continue dm nc m'i n ui Los Angeles Times JERUSALEM - Two suicide bombers, be- lieved to be members of a militant Islamic group, detonated powerful explosives yester- day near a bus stop crowded with Israeli soldiers returning from weekend furloughs, killing 19 people and wounding more than 60. The bombs exploded at about 9:30 a.m. as the young soldiers gathered for roll call and transport back to their bases in northern Israel and the occupied West Bank, flattening a snack bar and throwing dozens of troopers into the air and across the road. "The snack bar was blown apart by the first explosion," said Oleg Feinberg, who had been waiting for a bus at the busy Beit Lid junction near the coastal town of Netanya about 20 miles north of Tel Aviv. "Soldiers ran to help the wounded, and then in another two minutes there was a second explosion, even bigger. These bombs were meant to kill and injure as many people as possible." Prime Minister Yitzhak 'Rabin denounced the attack, the latest in a series of suicide bomb- ings by Muslim radicals in the heart of Israel, as a murderous atrocity with "the dual goal of killing Israelis and halting the peace process." The leader of Islamic Jihad, which opposes the 1993 agreement on Palestinian self-rule as a sellout by the Palestine Liberation Organiza- tion, said in Damascus, Syria, that two of his members had carried out the attack. Fathi Shukaki said the bombing was in retaliation for the killing earlier this month of three Palestinian policemen by Israeli soldiers and the assassina- tion of a leading Islamic Jihad activist in the Gaza Strip. "We confirm our ability to penetrate all the enemy's false security lines and reach the heart of the enemy," said Shukaki, Islamic Jihad's secretary general. "We say to the enemy that See BOMBING, Page 2 foster dialogue By THEKLA FISCHER For the Daily Cooperation between groups on oppos- ing sides of the Arab-Israeli conflict may come as a surprise to some, but two student groups, the University's Progressive Zion- ist Caucus (PZC) and the Palestinian Soli- darity Committee (PSC), are working to dispel common misconceptions. "The mission is to raise awareness of the real situation; making people aware of the occupation, working to alter American policy," said Khytam Dawood, a PSC mem- ber and University alum. Asked whether yesterday's suicide bombing that killed 19 Israeli soldiers and the resulting closure of the occupied territo- ries would thwart further collaboration, Dawood said, "There has been violence go- ing on for 26 years. Both sides condemn violence from either side." However, she said, "It was wrong that the entire Palestinian people should be punished for the actions of a few radi- cals." The platforms of the two organizations overlap on several points. The groups agree that Israeli occupation should cease, Pales- tinian statehood should be established along- side Israel and recognition of the right to self-determination should be mutual. The two groups have co-sponsored mov- ies, speakers, teach-ins and open-forum dis- cussions. Liaison to the PSC and former chair of the PZC, Shari Robinson, said those events were integral to promoting mutual under- See STUDENTS, Page 2 DUGUILAS KANR/D AiLaily Snowed in at Crisler Michigan State guard Eric Snow slams down two of his six points in the Spartans' 73-71 victory over Michigan yesterday at Crisler Arena. See SPORTSMonday for complete coverage. Rape si By FRANK C. LEE Daily Staff Reporter Ervin D. Mitchell Jr., who has been linked to three rapes and a rape- homicide in Ann Arbor by DNA tests, may have left additional incriminat- ing evidence behind. Police believe Mitchell pawned a necklace that may belong to the fifth and last known rape victim at an Ypsilanti pawn shop. Documents ob- tained by The Michigan Daily from Dave's Diamonds and Gold indicate a gold rope necklace and charm were sold to them by Mitchell on Dec. 10. A 42-year-old Ann Arbor woman, who was raped near Community High School on Oct. 13, reported that her necklace had been stolen. Police did not recover any body fluids from that assault, leading them to suspect a condom was used during aspect pawned victim's jewelry the attack. The necklace, however, may be the link police are looking for to connect Mitchell to the last in a series of rape spanning a 2 1/2-year period. Ann Arbor Police Detective Michael Schubring - a member of the task force - listed the necklace in a search warrant as one of the items police were searching for at four of Mitchell's pre- viously known addresses. Police searched the premises of Mitchell's girlfriend on Carolina Av- enue and his friend's apartment on Broadway in Ann Arbor, as well as Mitchell'smother's house and his aunt's house in Inkster, Mich., on Jan. 10. Michigan State Police Sgt. David Minzey of the Violent Crimes Unit, who crafted the behavioral profile of the serial rapist released to Ann Arbor citizens, said Mitchell fits the profile. Minzey said he believes serial rap- ists often retain mementos of their crimes so that they can relive the act as part of their violent sexual fantasies. Mitchell, 33, is behind bars at the Washtenaw County Jail, awaiting a Feb. 27 trial for a Dec. 24 assault and robbery attempt - a failed purse- snatching. In accordance with a Dec. 26 search warrant, samples of Mitchell's blood were drawn. Pre- liminary tests of those samples indi- cate that Mitchell is the serial rapist. Scientists at the Michigan State Police Crime Laboratory have com- pleted two DNA probes of Mitchell's blood. The statistical chances that another Black individual possessing the same DNA profile is one in 17,000 said the technicians. Ann Arbor Police detectives also have photographs of a muddy shoe print in a May 7 rape-homicide and shoe prints around the Oct. 13 crime scene. They are comparing them to a pair of black "army" boots and a pair of tennis shoes seized in January. Prosecutors are awaiting test re- sults from more DNA comparisons before issuing warrants against Mitchell for sexual assault. On Thurs- day, Judge Donald Shelton refused to reduce Mitchell's $50,000 bond. Police are still searching for a black Toshiba VCR, a tan cigarette case and credit cards that were taken from other rape victims. Mitchell's attorney, Assistant Washtenaw County Public Defender David Lankford, said he will ask Shelton to move the purse-snatching trial out of Washtenaw County over concerns of pre-trial publicity, The Ann Arbor News reported. Mitchell Kennedy matriarch, 104, dies at Hyannis Port home Rallies mark Roe's 22nd INSIDE ARTS 5 Wayne State University's production of "Nunsense" stirs up laughs, horror in the Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - As thou- sands of anti-abortion demonstrators flooded into Washington for a mas- sive protest march today to mark the anniversarv of the Sunreme Court's has always been peaceful, and main- stream anti-abortion leaders are urg- ing peaceful activities. But abortion-rights advocates are taking extra security precautions at abortion clinics here and around the s anniversary clinics has become so intense that a severe shortage of doctors willing to perform abortions has begun to limit access for women in many regions of the nation. Under mounting pressure to take HYANNIS PORT, Mass. (AP) - Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy, matriarch nf the Kennedy clan. whose faith and She once described her life as a series of "agonies and ecstasies." The exhilaration of nolitical suc-