2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 11, 1995 9, - HEARING Continued from page 1 When Kakazu went back to the house -ater, he brought five friends the .ither five students who are accused in + he case - "just to make sure he didn't get beat up again by like 20 guys," Hamdan asserted. He maintained neither he nor Kakazu's other four friends touched Wise or slammed a door on Wiest. He :aid they did not set foot on the porch, tnly watched from the lawn. Harmdan added, "If all of us were . umping on him so bad, he'd probably till be in the hospital." Wise and Wiest both indicated that they hope the six students will be zxpelled from the University. "My feeling is that whether ;Kakazu) was sentenced or not that he should be expelled from the Univer- sity, along with the other five defen- dants," Wise said. Expulsion is the most severe pun- ishment allowed under the code. The code states that expulsion is appropri- ate "for offenses which are violent, dangerous, repeated, or a willful fail- ure to comply with a lesser sanction." The co-complainants said the hear- ing would be with an adminstrator, rather than with a student panel. Kakazu said, "I'm just hoping that whoever's mediating it ... tomorrow will hear both sides and realize that both stories are completely opposite ... and realize that both sides were responsible for the fight." CHIAPAS Continued from page 1 can too!" By providing services such as health care and primary education, the Zapatistas have slowly built up a large base of peasant support. The Zapatistas claim to have an army of 5,000 indigenous people. Weaponry and communication devices, although far inferior to those of the Mexican military, indicate substantial middle- and upper-class financial support as well. On Jan. 1, 1994, about 800 Zapatista soldiers occupied San Cristobal de las Casas and five sur- rounding pueblos. They seized gov- ernment buildings, conducted public meetings and opened food warehouses to the poor. The rebels withdrew be- fore heavy military reinforcements could arrive, but the incident was a slap in the face for the Mexican mili- tary and a wake-up call to the govern- ment. "The attack was a surprise, but the government has known about the Zapatista movement for years," said a Mexican anthropologist in San Cristobal de las Casas. "The threat was never really taken seriously and the government did not want to risk the passage of NAFTA (North Ameri- can Free Trade Agreement) by start- ing a violent counter-insurgency cam- paign. The Zapatistas struck at the opportune time - the United States was watching and Mexico could not Chiapas: The Region Chiapan rebels have been fighting the Mexican government for almost a year and a half. Some of the region's main cities: UNITED STATES MEXICO Gulf of , Mexico Mexico Ocosingo San Cristobal do las Casas Las Altamirano Margaritasi 500 kmies 500 km Pacific Ocean AP afford to retaliate harshly." A cease-fire was called on Jan. 12, 1994, and formal negotiations in Feb- ruary produced government promises of electoral reform and improved ser- vices to the indigenous communities. The Zapatistas questioned the legiti- macy of the subsequent August elec- tions, however, and in December they occupied 32 pueblos, including many outside Chiapas. Zapatista gains are limited, how- ever. The PRI governor of Chiapas, Robledo Rinc6n, whom the Zapatistas accuse of fraudulently winning the August 1994 elections, stepped down in early February. Rinc6n was re- placed by another party member. New elections have been sched- uled for other southern states that have strongly protested election re- sults, but how far the PRI is willing to go with its reforms has yet to be seen. Early this February, President Ernesto Zedillo used force in an at- tempt to expel the Zapatistas from theirjungle camps. The public outcry within Mexico and from the interna- tional community in response to re- ported human rights violations, how- ever, forced Zedillo to partially with- draw the military. He has since re- turned to his program of trying to draw support away from the Zapatistas by providing some social welfare ser- vices to the indigenous communities. The communities have accepted the aid and even shown support for the government, but some view this a survival tactic rather than arealchange of heart. "I take their food and what medi- cal services they bring, they give my children candy and smile a lot, but I don't trust them. What do they want?" asked an elderly indigenous woman. By providing aid and creating a dual government in Chiapas with the defeated PRD candidate Amado Avendaio as acting governor, the Zapatistas have presented themselves as a legitimate power for change in Chiapas and a definite political threat to the Mexican government. To the 20 million Mexicans living in poverty, a successful Zapatistamove- mentcould translateintoamuch-needed increase in public services and aid. "Some say the Zapatistas are just another group of politicians, some say they are Cuban or German or even from the United States," said an in- digenous man watching a video of Zapatista leader Subcommandantc Marcos near the Cathedral in Sar Cristobal de las Casas. "I don't know what to think, but I hope they are real because we neec help, we need change. They give us hope and all we can do for now is trust." - Denson is an LSA senior pursuing a concentration in Latin American studies. Georgia rep. switches to GOP WASHINGTON - In the latest sign of the Democrats' eroding base, a conservative House member joined the Republican Party yesterday, becoming the third congressional Democrat to abandon the party since the GOP swept November's elections. The defection of Rep. Nathan Deal (D-Ga.), part of a vanishing breed of conservative Democrats in the House, strengthens the Republicans' hold on the South - a one time Democratic stronghold that now has a GOP majority in the House. It is also a bad omen for Democrats with any hopes for retaking control of the House in 1996. The Republican margin over Democrats in the House is now 231-203, with Deal one independent. Deal, 52, was one of only four Democrats in the 11-member Georgia delegation, and the only white Democratic member. As recently as last year, Georgia had a seven-member Democratic majority: four white, three Black. D w. .. w' ; " great scores... mF m m -am w COME WRITE FOR T HE SUMMER DAILY MASS MEETING MONDAY, APRIL 17 7 P.M. STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. 420 MAYNARD ST. Come to a FREE TOEFL seminar Date: Thursday, April 6, 1995 Time: 7:00 p.m. Location: Kaplan Educational Center 337 E. Liberty, Ann Arbor CALL 1-800-KAP-TEST to reserve a seat get a higher score KAPLAN Doctor may get homicide charge MILWAUKEE -- Honoring Karin Smith's dying wish, an inquest jury is recommending homicide charges against those who misread the Pap smears that could have saved her life and that of another woman. An expert testified that the laboratory missed unmistakable signs of cancer. The district attorney is expected to decide this week whether to file charges against the laboratory, a tech- nician and the doctor in charge of the lab in the case of Smith and Dolores Geary, both of whom died of cervical cancer. District Attorney E. Michael McCann charged that the women were victims of blatant errors. The American Medical Associa- tion said it knows of only one previ- ous case in which criminal charges were filed against a doctor for a mis- take, and none against laboratories or technicians. Smith died March 8 at age 29 after SAROUINDTEW Azerbaijan nixes Iran's share in oil venture MOSCOW-Bowing to U.S. pres- sure, the former Soviet republic of Azerbaijan has canceled Iran's 5 per- cent share in a Western-led consortium to develop vast offshore oil deposits in the Caspian Sea. The decision is a victory for the Clinton administration in its campaign to isolate Iran, which it accuses of sponsoring terrorism, opposing Middle East peace efforts, staging an arms buildup and trying to develop nuclear weapons. Administration officials have been struggling to draft tougher economic sanctions against Iran without inflict- ing greater pain on U.S. companies that would lose business under such sanctions. At the same time, the United States is leaning hard on vul- nerable third parties, including Rus- sia, to stop doing business with the Islamic state. Iran's exclusion from the biggest joint energy venture in the former So- viet Union - one committed to spend $7.4 billion over 30 years to develop reserves of about 4 billion barrels of oil - came after intense U.S. lobbying of asking McCann to launch the investi- gation. She testified before a congres- sional committee a year ago that she was dying because her health mainte- nance organization did not have the Pap smears diagnosed correctly. GOPAC reports $4K raised in 3 months WASHINGTON - The national Republican political action commit- tee controlled by House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) reported one of its most successful off-year fund-raising periods yesterday, generating $487,520 in three months and secur- ing Gingrich's place as the hottest money magnet on Capitol Hill. GOPAC, the political action com- mittee Gingrich has chaired since 1986, raised the money from 1,771 individuals across the country, most of them small donors and several of them wealthy repeat givers such as Wisconsin businessman Terry Kohler, who gave $70,000 on top of the more than $700,000 he and his wife have contributed since 1985. OniL the Azerbaijani government and some of its 10 foreign partners. Mexican chief dies, fraud alleged MEXICO CITY - President Ernesto Zedillo faced a transportation scandal yesterday as Mexico City's transport chief was found dead from gunshot wounds on the same day au- thorities disclosed an alleged $8 mil- lion in fraud involving the bankrupt municipal bus system and its union. Authorities investigated the appar- ent suicide of Luis Miguel Moreno while bus drivers thrown out of work by the bankruptcy took to the streets to protest the weekend roundup of a half a dozen union leaders on warrants stemming from a 4-year-old lawsuit. The scandal has national repercus- sions: Not only is the capital's gov- ernment a federal agency, but the com- bative bus driver's union has close ties to leftist causes, including the rebels in the southern state of Chiapas. The scandal began to unravel Sat- urday when city officials announced that the Ruta 100 municipal bus sys- tem was "no longer viable" and had been bankrupted by mismanagement. - From Daily wire services I STUDENT TRAVEL STA TRAVEL c t: .> *mow;"' a "" 5 $ > - as} , r . ': 9*-'_ 9.'. ~-A~.' j3, fb rpeP i~ioir girl~,j -4 n rig0peo Msh4 be WiIius t~~pluS'5q .CIlI B5I X55 9' ->9 .9 9, .;: .f._ V" -K - 9/ . -.9.. - - ... k;e 1 s4 .r # . . f a.." . ri . .K > .. o r, " M 'b: The Michigan Daily (tSSN 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 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu EDITORIAL Rosenberg, Editor 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, Tali Kravitz, Frank C. Lee, Timothy Lord. Gail Mongitoipradit, Tim OConnell, Lisa Poris, Zachary M. Raimi, Megan Schirnpf, Maureen Sirhal, Matthew Smart. Vahe Tazian. Michelle Lee Thompson, Maggie Weyhing. Josh White. CALENDAR EDITOR: Josh White. EDITORIAL Julie Becker, James Nash, Editors STAFF: Bobby Angel, James R. Cho, Jed Friedman. Zach Gelber. Ephraim R. Gerstein. Adrienne Jarnney, Chris Kaye, Jeff Keating. Joel F Knutson, Jim Lasser. Jason Lichtstein, Partha Mukhopadhyay, Scott Pence. Jean Twenge, David Wartowski. SPORTS _ Paul Barger, Managing Editor EDITORS: Darren Everson, Antoine Pitts, Tom Seeley, Ryan White. STAFF: Rachel Bachman, Scott Burton. Chris Carr, Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Sarah DeMar, Brett Forrest. Alan Goldenbach, James Goldstein, Ravi Gopel, Michael Joshua, Julie Keating. Brett Krasnove, John Leroi, Marc Lightdale. Dan McKenzie. Rebecca Moatz. Chris Murphy, Monica Polekov, Jed Rosent"a. Danielle Rumore, Brian Sklar, Tim Smith, Barry Sollenberger. Dan Stillman. Doug Stevens. Michelle Lee Thompson. ARTS Tomn Erlewine, Heather Phares, Editors EDITORS: Melissa Rose Berardo (Theater), Matt Carson (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 Halladay. Josh Herrington, Kari Jones, Emily Lambert, Shirley Lee, Scott Plagenhoef. Fred Rice. Joshua Rich, Sarah Rogacki, Dirk Schulze, Sarah Stewart, Prashant Tamaskar, Brian Wise, Robert Yoon, Michael Zilberman. PHOTO Jonathan Lurie, Eva Petrie, Editors STAFF: Tonya Broad, Mike Fitzhugh, Mark Friedman, Douglas Kanter, Stephanie Lim, Judith Perkins. Kristen Schaefer. Molly Stevens, Sara Stillman, Joe Westrate. 0i Enter the LifeStyles "Condoms and Safer Sex in the90's" Video Contest. Here's your chance to tel all those people trying to get inside- vrui A 'sAh r kni Vnlly n vur mind. All v uhave to do is make I