2- The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 10, 1995 9e a m s/ ' , i Gingrich discourages Perot's 3rd party The Washington Post WASHINGTON - House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) yes- terday sought to discourage support- ers of Ross Perot from bolting to a third party in 1996, warning that "the only person helped by a third party is President Clinton and the liberal Democrats." Gingrich declared during an ap- pearance on CBS's "Face the Na- tion": "If all of the pro-term-limits, antis-tax-increase, decentralize-gov- ernment, shrink-the-bureaucracy folks stay together as one party, we will win a smashing victory in '96, and it will be a victory for those val- ues. "If we split into two factions, then you can imagine acircumstance where President Clinton could get re-elected, and the Democrats might do even fairly well in the congressional races," he said. In 1992, surveys of the 19 percent of voters who supported Perot indi- cated that without the independent candidate, they would have divided roughly evenly between Clinton and President Bush. Since then, however, former Perot voters have become intensely critical of the Clinton administration, and a majority of them voted for Republi- can House candidates in 1994, pro- viding crucial support in the GOP takeover of Congress. The New York Times reported yesterday that many activists in Perot's United We Stand America organization are disenchanted with the Republican Party and want to run a third-party candidate for President in 1996. Their disappointment is based in part on the GOP's failure to win ap- proval of congressional term limits and the balanced budget amendment, and the Republican leadership's ne- glect of campaign finance and lobby reform. At least two other widely known figures - Jesse Jackson, who ran for the Democratic nomination in 1984 and 1988, and Colin L. Powell, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff - have been mentioned as possible third party, or independent, candi- dates. There is general agreement that a Perot bid would hurt the GOP and help Clinton, while a Jackson candi- dacy would hurt Clinton by splitting off Black and white liberal support. Powell's impact as an independent candidate is unclear. Gingrich noted yesterday that Powell "is fabulously popular," and said he hopes that Powell will be included among those considered for the Republican vice presidential nomi- nation. "He may well decide to run for President," Gingrich said. "He cer- tainly would be very formidable in either slot." 4 A t* EPORT~?L ~ M Thousands march for women's rights WASHINGTON-Galvanized by a Republican-controlled Congress that one speaker said has launched "a conservative crusade against women's rights," tens of thousands of people gathered on the Mall yesterday to protest domestic violence, proposals to cut welfare and attacks on abortion clinics. They described themselves as battered women and incest survivors, welfare mothers and union organizers, college idealists and longtime politica activists. The vast majority were women, and most were white, although there was a sprinkling of black and brown faces. The National Organization for Women organized the Rally for Women's Lives with a long list of issues - from immigrants' and gay rights to affirmative action - and touted it as the first step in influencing the political agenda for 1996, an election year. Under blue skies and a hot sun, the crowd often seemed festive, listening to speeches and music from a huge stage set up with the U.S. Capitol as its backdrop. But many in the crowd said they felt isolated by the Republican revolution that swept the country in November and frightened by the social reformso outlined in the Republican "Contract With America." UI t UI Towe 536 S. Forest Ave. Your Own bi Share a be SPECIAL: Free Microwave Oven to first 15 Joint Two-Bedroom Apartment Leases Signed U droom from $315 per monthI Broom from $11hper month to 12 Month Leases Hours: g -2680 10-8 Mon-Fri, . 12-5 Sat/Sun NE E E E E E E E E MN Government, rebels meet in Chiapan hills &1 (313)761 SEu.....E E OCOSINGO, Mexico (AP)-The government and peasant-backed rebels are making a new effort to end a lingering rebellion that has fed wor- ries of Mexican instability in the midst of economic crisis. Government and rebel negotiators met yesterday to set a time, place and agenda for talks aimed at ending the 16-month-old uprising, one of sev- "THE SEVEN DEADLY SINS IN APPLYING TO LAW SCHOOL AND HOW TO AVOID THEM" A Seminar on the Law School Admission Process and the Successful Student's Approach Featured Topics Include: " How Law Schools Evaluate Applicants " How to Select Law Schools " Strategy and Timetable for Admission + Free Comparative Guide to Low Schools Presented by EXCEL Test Preparation Wednesday, April 12th 7:30 PM Michigan Union- Pendleton Room ALL STUDENTS WELCOME - NO CHARGE London $289 Paris $+299 FranIdurt $299 Madrid $309 Rome $365 faese outwyn cotedo xxrtfntrMsum Restrifcfxrs aoi taxes not Incuded and taxes a bect to dw~tng. GaE todfy tirontw~d dt dm. 1220 S. University, Suite 208 (Above McDonalds) 990200 Stop by tod.for FRE tuent Tav.l*., -a eral factors behind the shakeup of the Mexican economy since December. The meeting, in the village of San Miguel west of Ocosingo, was the first formal talks between the govern- ment and the Zapatista National Revo- lutionary Army in more than a year. The Zapatistas led a Jan. 1, 1994, uprising to demand better conditions for indigenous peasants in Chiapas, Mexico's poorest state. Twelve days of fighting ended with a cease-fire after about 145 people had been killed. The last formal talks were in Feb- ruary 1994 in San Cristobal de las Casas, a major town in Chiapas. Sub- sequent talks stalled, and the Zapatistas broke off contacts in Octo-. ber claiming the government was plan- ning a military offensive. President Ernesto Zedillo ordered the army into rebel-held areas in Feb- ruary and thousands of soldiers occu- pied pro-rebel villages. Arrest war- rants issued for rebel leaders were later suspended to get them back to negotiations. The two sides exchanged letters to set up yesterday's talks. The rebels want the peace talks to be in Mexico City, saying it is more neutral and that there are still too many soldiers and paramilitary groups in Chiapas. The government has pro- posed any of six sites in Chiapas. In the 1994 talks, some tentative agreements were reached. But the rebels said the proposals were re- jected in the indigenous villages where they were taken for approval. CH IAPAS Continued from page 1 the people are demanding the return of their property. "The ranchers are scared," said a young truck driver in Margaritas. "They all have their own private militias guarding their families and their lands, but if the people decide to attack they will kill the landowners, there are too many of them to stop." The resources of these squatter settlements are quickly depleted, and many families opt for migration to the cities. Unemployment levels due to the deepening Mexican economic crisis, however, make the job search next to impossible. The cities' streetsteem with small children peddling crafts, and along the boulevards and side streets families have resorted to begging. Stemming from resentment toward the government and the land-owning elite, a rebel group calling itself EZLN (Zapatista Army for National Libera- tion), has emerged in the jungles of Chiapas. Although the group has been organizing for 14or 15 years, ithasonly gained public attention in the last year and a halfdue to its increased militancy. Chiapas isaforgotten, ignoredland," said a former member of the Mexican Army, now aZapatista supporter. "They takeouroil, our crops and our water, but they don't give us roads, electricity, schools or basic health care. They keep us here as slaves to the land owners and won't let us earn our way out of the jungle. We just work and die here." The Zapatistas say the indigenous people of highland Chiapas, like the jungle that surrounds them, are awak- In Calif., Clinton promotes child safety SACRAMENTO, Calif. -Presi- dent Clinton enjoyed a rare moment in California politics Saturday: feted as "California's best friend" by a state Democratic Party that is prepared to grant him its unified support for re- election in the coming year. Clinton's remarks came during a weekend swing through California. He flew to Los Angeles on Saturday afternoon and spoke to ameeting spon- sored by the National Education As- sociation and dedicated to the issue of violence in schools. He pointed to figures from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that show there had been 105 violent, "school-associated" deaths in a two-year period ending last year. These included 81 homi- cides, 19 suicides and five uninten- tional firearm deaths, the study said. Schoolyard fights have been around as long as schoolyards, Clinton told the crowd at the Century Plaza Hotel, but today "there are guns on the playground, guns in the classroom and guns on the bus. And the result is terror, serious injury and death for our children." "If young people are not free to learn in safety, they are not free to learn at all," he said. Elementary schools deficient, study finds WASHINGTON - One of the largest studies ever undertaken of the nation's elementary schools has con- cluded that too many of them use class time poorly, are isolated from their communities, and do not teach language skills or promote civic vir- tues enough. The study, to be released today by the Carnegie Foundation for the Ad- vancement of Teaching, urges edu- cators to devote new attention to improving elementary schools and gives them an outline of what every elementary school in the nation should have and should do - a model concept that it dubs "The Basic School." O A ROU ND T H E U.S. plane hit at Sarajevo airport SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina - A U.S. relief plane was hit by Serb gunfire Saturday, and all aid flights to Sarajevo were canceled. The gunfire underscored the mounting tensions between U.N. peacekeepers and Bosnia's warring sides, which have resumed fighting in recent weeks despite a cease-fire that ostensibly remains in effect. The 10 bullets that hit the C-130 transport plane during takeoff came from rebel Serb positions northwest of the airport, U.N. spokesman Maj. Herve Gourmelon said. The plane's hydraulic system was damaged and the cockpit windshield hit, U.N. officials said. There were no injuries and the plane flew on to Anocona, Italy. The airport was put on the highest state of alert and all flights were canceled. Another U.N. spokesman, Alexander Ivanko, said harassment by Bosnian Serbs was on the increase. On Friday, Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic said he expected relations to deteriorate. U.N. officials, frustrated over re- peated hijackings of U.N. vehicles and equipment, agreed to allow Serb fOR L D military officials to check vehicles using a key road from the airport to the city in exchange for guarantees of safety for all the vehicles. Japanese voters elect0 comedians to office as show of rebellion TOKYO - In a rebellion against established political parties, Japan's mushrooming body of unaffiliated vot- ers elected comedians as governors of both Tokyo and Osaka yesterday. The upsets in Japan's two largess states, or prefectures, stunned Prime MinisterTomiichi Murayama's Social- ists and his senior coalition partner, the Liberal Democrats, who supported long- time bureaucrats in both races. In Tokyo, Yukio Aoshima, 62, a male comedian and writer who was elected to the upper house of Parlia- ment for the first time in 1968, won against a candidate who had served seven prime ministers at the top of the nation's professional bureaucracy. In Osaka, Isamu Yamada -a storytelling comedian - also beat a retired bureaucrat despite entering the election only three days before the campaign started. - From Daily wire services T A This This is your is your brain. brain after taking summer courses at GVSU. If you're coming home to "Vest Michigan for the summer, consider this: Grand Valley State University provides expanded course offerings at campuses in Allendale and Grand Rapids, and Centers in Holland and Muskegon. Need more credits? Schedule yourself out of a course? Want an elective not offered by your college or university? You don't have to be an Einstein to see the opportunity this presents. You can: Register as a GVSU guest student, enroll by phone, and take the classes you want because tuition is affordable. And you'll be taught by uni- versity faculty, not graduate students. You cannot: Transfer credits your school won't recognize, so please. 1 4,to fall 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. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu CIAI .d CTACC.1.] N.- ..&10c. ..J v IC. m * IM N'6 w r Iv1 I UK/AL 51 AFF rvlirhaP1 Rncanharsr Frlitnr In Ch1pt L GflivsVsmi 71mrrI ,n~dl nub Inuflgifcullur !n 11 111f m NEWS Nate Hurley, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jonathan Berndt. Lisa Dines, Andrew Taylor, Scot Woods. STAFF: Patience Atkin, Cathy Boguslaski. Kiran Chaudhri, Jodi Cohen, Spencer Dickinson, Sam Dudek, Lenny Feller. Christy Glass. Ronnie Glassberg, Jennifer Harvey. Katie Hutchins, Daniel Johnson, Amy Klein. Stephanie Jo Klein, rai Kravitz, Frank C. Lee, "Timothy Lord, Gail Mongkooradit Tim O'Connell, Lisa Poris. Zachary M. Raimi, Megan Schimpf, Maureen Sirhal. Matthew Smart Vane Tazian, Michelle Lee Thompson, Maggie Weyhing. Josh White. CALENDAR 9DITOR: Josh White. EDITORIAL Julie Becker, James Nash,Editors STAFF: Bobby Angel. James R. Cho, Jed Friedman, Zach Gelber" Ephraim R. Gerstein, Adrienne Janney, Chris Kaye, Jeff Keating, Joel F. 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Josh Nerrington, Kari Jones. Em lyLambert, Shirty Lee. Scott Plagenhoef, Fred Rice. Joshua Rich, Sarah Rogacki, Dirk Schulze. Sarah Stewart, Prashant Tamaskar. Brian Wise. Robert Yoon, Michael Zilbennran. PHOTO Jonathan Lurie, Evan Petrie, Editors STAFF: Tonya Broad, Mike Fitzhugh, Mark Friedman, Douglas Kanter, Stephanie Lim, Judith Perkins, Kristen Schaefer, Molly