2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 24, 1995 "'Anowl~aJtt Republican governors defend welfare plan WASHINGTON (AP) - The House is voting this week on disman- tling 45 social programs including cash welfare, federal child care, and school lunch. and nutrition programs and sending the money and the re- sponsibility for the programs to the states in the form of block grants. House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R- Ga.) decried Democrats who have repeatedly called the Republican plan mean-spirited and cruel. "The people on the other side who are attacking our effort to reform welfare should be made to bear the burden of the system they would keep," Gingrich said. Michigan Gov. John Engler said yesterday that Republicans are unfairly being tagged as "mean-spirited" for welfare reform plans since the changes reduce growth in welfare spending but do not make cuts. Standing in front of a bar chart, Engler indicated that spending on welfare over the next five years would increase by 30 percent under the Re- publican plan; under the current sys- tem, that same spending would rise by 39 percent. The Republican plan would in- crease benefits but by $66 billion less than the current system through the end of the century. "The debate is not about money. It's about who sets the policy, who decides," Engler said at a press con- ference with 13 fellow Republican governors, Gingrich, Majority Leader Bob Dole (R-Kan.) and Haley Barbour, chairman of the Republican National Committee. "Most people are going to look at this and say, 'Why aren't you saving more?"' Barbour said, pointing to what he called a "sliver" of difference between the cost of the current wel- fare system and the Republican plan. CIA operation spurs public debate WASHINGTON - In a rare and bitter public exchange over a clandestine operation, a top CIA official angrily denied accusations yesterday that the spy agency had acted improperly in withholding information about the murder of two men - one an American, the other the husband of an American -in Guatemala. Adm. William O. Studeman, acting CIA director, accused an influential member of the House intelligence committee of leveling a "completely false and utterly irresponsible charge" that the CIA and, later, the Clinton administration, covered up information that a paid CIA informant had ordered the murders. But the congressman, Rep. Robert G. Torricelli (D-N.J.), held fast to his accusations, which he outlined in a letter to the White House, and asserted that the revelations are strong evidence that the mission of the CIA must be redefined. "It obviously needs restructuring," he said. "This operation needs to get under control." The exceptionally acrimonious exchange, unusual in that key Washington officials were talking publicly about one of the spy agency's secret operations, comes as the CIA is undergoing both internal and external evaluations aimed at defining its role in the post-Cold War world. Ex-cult members tell of bizarre lifestyle inside 1994 ACADEMY AWAR 5 kOPJT ODF= AwDMIAMAX :< AND (OLA SAVOR THE FLAVOR ( Academy Award Nominations John Travolta Uma Thurman Samuel L. Jackson PULP FICTION 1:30 4:30 8:00 11:00 4:30 7:00 9:00 l :a y 1:30 Sat and Sun only - 11:00 Friday & Saturday Only I I U! a . U U U U 0 U FreMicrOwaeOven for New Tenants We will provide a brand new microwave oven FREE to the first 50 leases signed. * Stop by to - L~nivevlity view our models. Apartments shown daily 10-8 Sat/Sun 12-5 536 S. Forest Ave. 761-680Mention how you heard this 761-2680 offer to qualify * Some restrktions may apply. TOKYO (AP) -- Former follow- ers and investigators of the apocalyp- tic Aum Shinri Kyo cult in Japan and Russia are painting a chilling picture of conditions in its compounds and communes: filthy, bizarre and cruel. "It appeared that many young people were affected by their preach- ing, some suffered serious health dam- age, some came down with severe mental disorders," Russian Counter- intelligence Agency spokesman Vladimir Tomarovsky said yesterday in Moscow. Aum Shinri Kyo, whose name means Sublime Truth, has six centers in Moscow and a branch in the south- ern city of Vladikavkaz and claims more than 30,000 members in Russia. The group says it has about 10,000 followers in Japan. Tomarovsky said he had no grounds to suspect the Moscow branch of planning any terrorist activity. But the group faces possible criminal and civil charges of fraud and depriving young people of their rights. In the days since the cult gained notoriety over suspicions it was be- hind Monday's Tokyo subway gas attack, escaped former members and their advocates have depicted a life of fear. Inside the group's commune near Kamikuishiki, about 70 miles west of Tokyo, some sectmembers were found smeared with dirt, wandering aim- lessly. In a raid on the commune Wednes- day, police and paramedics carried out about 50 people who were appar- ently too weak, dazed or ill to move. Six were hospitalized, and doctors said they were all suffering from dehydra- tion and malnutrition. Amazin' Blue When news strikes call the Daily! 763-2459 The patients remained uncoopera- tive during their treatment, refusing to speak at all, said Dr. Shigeo Saito of the Yamanashi Red Cross Hospital. One patient, a woman in her 50s, was comatose and possibly suffering from a drug addiction, Saito said. A 64-year-old innkeeper, whose two daughters are followers, told the national newspaper Asahi that he was kidnapped from his bed and woke up at a Tokyo hospital run by the group. He said he was then taken to the Kamikuishiki commune, and finally escaped five months later. New arrivals were given intrave- nous injections in the neck for several weeks as part of "medical treatment," the innkeeper told the newspaper. Every morning, he was forced to drink several gallons of warm water and then vomit as part of "training," he added. The water came from a hose connected toaplastic container on the wall. "I told them it was unbearable, but they never stopped," he said. Lawyers supporting former mem- bers and families of current followers of the cult say at least 1,000 people have sought counseling or protection after contacts with the group. Many, however, return to the group because of loneliness, said attorney Taro Takimoto. Shoko Asahara, who founded the sect in 1984, gathered followers with his claims that people can attain en- lightenment through yoga, medita- tion and psychic training. He also predicted that the world would end in 1997, but that sect followers would survive. Lawyers say newcomers to the sect are kept in cell-like rooms with N.Y. student protest leads to arrests NEW YORK (AP) - When stu- dents and police clashed in a protest over funding cuts to public schools yesterday, 60 people were arrested and about 20 people were injured, including 14 officers. Up to 10,000 people gathered in a park across from City Hall to per- suade Gov. George Pataki and Mayor Rudolph Giuliani to shun budget cuts that demonstrators said would hobble education. But scuffles broke out when the group, which did not have a permit to march, tried to move beyond the bar- ricades. Hundreds of police in riot gear stood shoulder to shoulder behind wooden and steel barricades, attempt- ing to keep the protesters from block- ing traffic. Scores more maneuvered on horses and motorcycles, forming a barrier between the students and the street. The arrests were primarily for dis- orderly conduct, and the injuries were minor. The governor and the mayor have proposed budgets that require higher tuition at city and state universities. TEACH-IN Continued from page I the Students for a Democratic Society, was a key speaker at the 1965 protest rally on the steps of the Graduate Li- brary. Last night, Haber hosted a dis- cussion panel on "Education and . Reconciliation." The panel debated .,y 4 the role of activism ' a and reform in quiet AROUNDTHE L- Kozyrev: U.S.-Russia 'honeymoon 'is over GENEVA - The U.S.-Russia "honeymoon has come to an end," Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev declared yesterday after talks with Secretary of State Warren Christo- pher on increasingly rancorous dis- agreements over Chechnya and nuclear sales to Iran. In a more encouraging vein, Kozyrev also said the two countries have a growing ability to resolve prob- lems. The meeting ended "not in di- vorce," he told a news conference after the meeting of nearly four hours. Christopher, too, portrayed the recently strained relationship as one in which U.S. and Russian leaders are determined to address differences "jointly and candidly." But as the two men opened plan- ning for a May meeting in Moscow between President Clinton and Rus- sian President Boris Yeltsin, it was clear they had failed to move closer to resolving differences over Iran, Chechnya and NATO. They announced formation of a working group to study nuclear pro- liferation issues, an apparent attempt to find a way to deal with U.S. oppo- sition to Russia's plan to sell nuclear power plants to Iran. The group is to complete its re- view in time for the May 10 meeting between Clinton and Yeltsin. American neo-Nazi arrested in Denmark 0 The University's Award Winning Coed A Cappella Ensemble Will be holding Auditols!! For all voice parts Man testifies in White House gunman case WASHINGTON - A business- man with a haircut similar to Presi- dent Clinton's testified the gunfire at the White House last October ap- peared to be directed at him and three companions. "We said to one another, 'They're shooting at us,"' Dennis Basso said yesterday during the trial of Fran- cisco Martin Duran, a Colorado Springs, Colo., man accused of trying to kill the President Oct. 29. Federal prosecutors trying to win a conviction on an assassination charge argue that Duran opened fire after mistaking Basso for Clinton. Defense attorneys, however, have said Duran was firing randomly and did not intend to hurt anyone. Basso, a gray-haired, 220-pound furrier, said he and the others were finishing a tour of the White House and were standing just outside when the shooting began. As leaves on trees shook and tufts of dirt popped up, he and the others crouched down. Secret Service officers led them back inside. Duran is being tried on 10 counts, including attempted assassination, which could put him behind bars for life. He is accused of shooting into the White House. FBI agreed to pay , Farrakhan informer The FBI agreed to pay the informer in the alleged murder-for-hire plot against Louis Farrakhan $45,000 after he agreed to tape conversations with the daughter of Malcolm X. Michael Fitzpatrick told court offi- cials about the agreement in a hearing yesterday in U.S. District Court in Min- nesota and revealed that he already has@ been paid $34,000. A law-enforcement source familiar with the case confirmed the amounts. Defense attorneys for Qubilah Bahiyah Shabazz, who is charged with plotting to kill Farrakhan, sought the hearing before a U.S. magistrate in an attempt to question Fitzpatrick's cred- ibility. ' BONN, Germany -- An American neo-Nazi dubbed the "Farm Belt Fuehrer" was under arrest yesterday in Denmark, while police in Germany seized weapons and propaganda in raids on 80 homes of his teen-age supporters. After a cat-and-mouse chase across Europe, Gary Lauck of Lincoln, Neb., was seized Monday on an international arrest warrant issued by Germany. Lauck had thwarted German au- thorities for two decades by acting as the main supplier of hate literature to German fascists. The41-year-oldLauckoncesaid Jews were treated too nicely in Nazi concen- tration camps and claimed Jews were the "main belligerents" in World WarII. His anti-Semitic material has gone to several other nations as well. In the United States, he has circulated videos with titles like "Race And Reason." In one of them, he looks a little like Hitler himself, giving a stiff-arm salute as he stands in front of a swastika flag. - From Daily wire services 0 Mass meeting on Sunday, March 26th in room #2105 Michigan Union For more information please call 763-1107 6PM COLLEGE SOPHOMORE? BEEN THINKING ABOUT JOINING AIR FORCE ROTC? ....... i / Ic. @: Religious Services AVAVAVAVA Episcopal Church at UofM CANTERBURY HOUSE 518 E. Washington St. (behind Laura Ashley) SUNDAY: 5 p.m. Holy Eucharist followed by informal supper All Welcome 665-0606 The Rev'd Virginia Peacock, Chaplin CHRISTIAN LIFE CENTER CHURCH Worship: 11 a.m. & 7 p.m. 2146 Moeller Ave. Ypsilanti 485-4670 Pastor Henry J. Healey CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 W. Stadium (across from Pioneer High School) SlNDAY: Worship 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Bible Study 9:30 a.m. WEDNESDAY: Bible Study 7 p.m. 662-2756 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by 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 7640558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. St a " I 1 F .-rE7r. rw t IL cv vrs rl . o i nrr Irncnaei Ruaenuergy culrur in s.mer m NEWS Nate Hurley, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jonathan Berndt, Lisa Dines, Andrew Taylor. Scot Woods. STAFF: Patience Atkin, Danielle Belkin. Cathy Boguslaski. Jodi Cohen. Spencer Dickinson. Kelly Feeney, Chnisty Glass.-Ronnie Glassberg, Jennifer Harvey, Katie Hutchins. Daniel Johnson, Amy Kein, Stephanie Jo Klein, Maria Kovac, Tali Kravitz, Frank C. Lee, Timothy Lord. Lisa Michalski, Gail Mongkolpradit. Tm O'Conneil. Lisa Poris, Zachary M. Raimi, Megan Schimpf, Maureen Sirfial, Matthew Smart, Vane Tazian, Michelle Lee Thompson, Josh White. CALENDAR EDITOR: Josh White. EDITORIAL Julie Becker, James Nash, Editors STAFF Bobby Angel. James R. Cho, Allison Dirond, Jed Friedman, Zach Gelber, Ephraim R. Gerstein, Adrenne Janney, Chris Kaye, Jeff Keating, Joel F. Ktnutson, Jim Lasser, Jason Lchtstein. Partha Mukhopadhyay. Scott Pence, Jean Twenge, David Wartowski. SPORTS Paul Barger, Managing Editor EDITORS: Darren Everson,. Antoine Pitts, Tom Seeley, Ryan White. STAFF: Rachel Bachmans Roderick Beard, Eugene Bowen, Scott Burton. Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Sarah DeMar, Marc Diller, Brett Forrest. Alan Goldenbach, James Goldstein. Ravi Gopal. Chaim Hyman, Michael Joshua, Julie Keating, Brett Krasnove, John Leroi, Marc Lightdale. Dan McKenzie, Rebecca Moatz, Chris Murphy. Jed Rosenthal, Davy Rothbart, Danielle Rumore, Brian Skar, Tim Smith. Barry Sollenberger, Dan Stillman, Doug Stevens, Michelle Lee Thompson. ARTS Tom Erlewine, Heather Phares, Editors EDITORS: Melissa Rose Bernardo (Theater), Matt*Car"son (Fine Arts), Kirk Miller (Books), Andy Dolan (Music), Liz Shaw (Weekend etc.). Alexandra Twin (Film), Ted Watts (Weekend, etc.). STAFF: Sangita Baxi, Matt Benz, Eugene Bowen, Jennifer Buckley. Mark Carlson, David Cook. Thomas Crowley, Ella de Leon. Ben Ewy, Brian Gnatt, Jessie Hallwday, Josh Herrington, Karl Jones, Emily Lambert, Shirley Lee, Scott Piagenhoef, Fred Rice, Joshua Rich, Sarah Rogacki, Dirk Schuize, Sarah Stewart, Prashant Tamaskar, Brian Wise, Robert Yoon, Michael Zilberman. PHOTO Jonathan Lurie, Evan Petrie, Editors STAFF: Tonya Broad. Mike Fitzhugh, Mark Friedman, Douglas Kanter, Stephanie Lim, Judith Perkins, Kristen Schaefer, Molly