2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 11, 1996 Christopher warns China at'risk a exercie NATION/WORLD W .Newsday WASHINGTON - President Clinton has ordered a second Navy air- craft carrier group to join one already in the waters near Taiwan as tensions mlount between China and Taiwan, sources said. The dispatch of the second carrier group comes as Secretary of State War- ren Christopher warned China yester- day that the military exercises it is hold- 'ihg in the Taiwan Strait are "unneces- sarily risky" and "unnecessarily reck- less" and that belligerent actions against Taiwan would have "grave conse- quences." Pentagon officials said yesterday that the aircraft carrier USS Independence and three of its battleships were ordered Saturday to move to within about 100 miles of the Taiwan Strait. " Administration officials said the Pen- tagon will announce today that the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Nimitz and five or six accompanying stips will arrive from the Persian Gulf a few days before Taiwan's March 23 presidential election. ' Christopher declined to say what the battle groups would do. "We're concerned to make sure those forces ... are in a position to be helpful if .they need to be," he said on NBC's "Meet the Press." On Friday, China began testing guided missiles within 30 miles of Tai- wan. China ratcheted up the regional tensions Saturday when it announced it AID dontlnued from Page IA college decisions. Melissa Ksar, of Troy, said her son ,Jamal has applied to five universities. With her oldest son already at the Uni- versity, financial aid is a necessity for the family. "It really concerns me because (Jamal has) been offered positions to play foot- ball at several schools," Ksar said. The 4decision "will depend on whether he gets financial aid from the schools." Jamal said his first choice is Kalamazoo College, but the $25,000 tuition may prevent his attendance. "I'd like to be decided right now, but Fm waiting for what (the schools) say," said the Troy High School senior. - University spokesperson Julie Peterson said the federal problems leave the Uni- versity with little choice but to wait for results. Last week, Peterson said, federal pro- cessing systems were accessed for in- #ormation with which to start calculat- *ig the aid requests for nearly 12,000 Jniversity students. "Normally, 10,000 forms are ready (at this time) ... last week there were. pnly 1,300 (forms available)," she said. Peterson said the University's Office vfFinancial Aid will do its best with the limited information available. "Our staff will have a time crunch," she said. "They're going to scramble, but they're willing to do that." Harper said that if the problem be- comes serious enough, universities may would hold live ammunitionwargames in the strait that will run until March20. National security adviser Anthony Lake, in an appearance yesterday on ABC's "This Week With David Brinkley," said that "if there are acci- dents" in the military exercises, China "will be held accountable. And wehave also said that if they attack Taiwan, there will be grave consequences." Several U.S. officials said the admin- istrationhasnoreasontodoubtBeijing's public assurances that it does not intend to use the military exercises as a cover for invading Taiwan, a self-governing island that China considers to be a prov- ince of China. "We have no evidence" to suggest the exercises will lead to conflict, one official said, "but we want to be prudent." Another official described the deci- sion to move the carrier task forces as an effort to deter any Chinese adventurism. The U.S. ships and planes will "monitor the activities" of Chinese forces and "ensure that the stated pur- pose (of the military exercise) remains the actual purpose." U.S. officials have no plans atpresent to sail the U.S. vessels through the Taiwan Strait, seeing no need to con- duct such a maneuver at this time, sev- eral officials said. The Nimitz and four escort vessels sailed through the strait in December in a maneuver that U.S. officialsdescribed as sending a mes- sage to Beijing to refrain from military action against Taiwan. consider extending deadlines for hous- ing and admission to accommodate stu- dents who depend on financial aid. "I don't think the University will be unique in that respect," she said, adding that schools are already considering pushing back the May I deadline. LSA senior Maya Waleson said that in her four years at the University she was dependent on financial aid. "I've had to do wait until I got my award notice every year before I would register for fall classes to ensure I could continue at the University of Michi- gan," she said. Although she will graduate in May, Waleson said she is concerned for other students. "I think it's very detrimental to our educational process." Michigan Student Assembly Rep. Andy Schor, who chairs MSA's Exter- nal Relations Committee, said students need to make their anxiety known to Washington legislators. "We can keep calling the Depart- ment of Education and tell them that we're pissed," he said. "If we keep calling ... they'll (work faster) so we'll stop bugging them." "The later you know (if you got aid), the less time you have to figure out how you're going to get by," Schor added. Butts said that the federal govern- ment is sending out computer software to many high schools to inform people of the problems students may be facing. SNRE sophomore Mona Hanna, chair of Students to Protect Financial Aid, agreed that students need to be active. "All we can do is pressure the federal government to work faster." Republican presidential hopeful Sen. Bob Dole waves to supporters at a campaign rally in Tulsa Okla., on Saturday in preparation for the Super Tuesday primary. Dole co sapproach Newsday Halfway through this year's Republi- can presidential primary campaign, mo- mentum, finances and organization favor the front-runner, Sen. Bob Dole (R-Kan.). With nine straight primary victories last week, with 392 delegates in hand, with most of Super Tuesday's 362 delegates at stake in seven primaries likely to follow, Dole has a seemingly insurmountable lead. "I smell victory in the air," Dole said Saturday, though he continued to repeat, "I need 996 delegates." His remaining challengers also ignore the standard in- dicators. Neither conservative commen- tator Pat Buchanan, with his Pitchfork Brigade, nor millionaire publisher Steve Forbes shows any sign of slowing down. Their travel and media messages con- tinue, and the bitterness among candi- dates has escalated. Buchanan has scheduled radio broadcasts in Texas and plans visits to California, Ohio, Illinois and Michiganand a bus crusade across Pennsylvania. Forbes has pur- chased another barrage of TV advertis- ing in Florida and Texas. The upshot: For very different rea- sons, the three will continue their slugfest through this week's Super Tues- day contests in Florida, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas and Louisiana and beyond to the re- maining 22 state primaries over the next 10 weeks. Dole is in a position to sweep the Super Tuesday primaries. There are already six political corpses - Republican Sens. Phil Gramm of Texas, Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania and Richard Lugar of Indiana; Tennessee's ex-governor, Lamar Alexander; California Gov. Pete Wilson and Michigan industrialist Morry Taylor have all dropped out, having spent nearly $50 million for a total of 12 delegates. Rep. Bob Dornan ofCalifornia never showed much life anyway. Of fhe four survivors, Buchanan and ex-ambassa- dor Alan Keyes are fueled by the pas- sion of their ideas and Forbes by an inherited estate, and Dole is limited only by federal restrictions on how much money he can spend. Super Tuesday dates to 1972, when Southern Republicans, seeking more influence in presidential politics, moved their primaries to the second Tuesday in March. As uniform as that wish may have been, the region now bubbles with conflicting pressures and interests. As the candidates focused their ener- gies on the four largest states voting Tues- day-Florida (98 delegates), Texas (123), Oklahoma (38) and Tennessee (38), each was pursuing a different agenda. Forbes was proselytizing his "hope, growth and opportunity" theology of supply-side economics, featuring the flat tax. Buchanan said he was trying to remake the Republican Party in his con- servative, isolationist, anti-abortion, Stunt rider killed while trying to set airborne record LAS VEGAS - A veteran motor- cycle stunt rider crashed to his death yesterday while trying to break a record jump over a bridge, narrowly missing a landing ramp. Butch Laswell easily cleared the 38-foot- tall Skywalk Bridge, but when he came down he was off to the left of the 27-foot- high ramp by several feet and slammed into the concrete pavement in Mesquite, about 80 miles northeast of Las Vegas. He was pronounced dead at a hospital. "The wind may have been a factor," said Police ChiefMichael Murphy. "Ev- erything was set for the jump and he had a window of opportunity to jump, but there was wind, and he was aware of that. It was his decisiop." Winds were gusting from Laswell's right to left. Laswell had planned to accelerate his Honda CR500 to 70 mph and soar at least 10 feet over the bridge to surpass his previous record of 41 feet above the ground, according to the Oasis Resort, site of the stunt. He was to remain airborne for 120 feet before landing. Laswell had completed more than 5,000 jumps in 20 years and had a 100- percent safety recqrd, the hotel said in a statement. Study: Coffee may cut risk of suicide CHICAGO - Women who drink coffee are less likely to commit suicide than those who do not, suggests a study published today. The author'cautions that the results may not be significant because doctors might have told depressed patients not to drink coffee. The study of 86,626 female nurs from 1980 to 1990 found 11 suici among those who drank two to three cups of caffeinated coffee per day, compared with 21 cases among colleagues who said they almost never drank coffee. "Coffee drinkers seem to do every- thing that seems to put them at risk for depression and suicide, but they are highly protected," said the study author, Dr. Ichiro Kawachi of Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hq pital in Boston. NA*t, :t, REPORT :"Y Online users shoelittlesupport for porn CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - Even his lawyer acknowledges that Bruce Black is a pedophile who enjoys looking at pictures of young boys having sex. What lawyer John Bisbee is trying to do is convince a federal judge that the FBI's "Operation Innocent Images" violated Black's privacy and free speech rights by snooping on his online swapping of child pornography. However, few online activists along the electronic frontier are willing to supp Black, a 29-year-old former Boy Scout worker. "We certainly don't have a problem with the police investigating people for child porn," says Stanton McCandish of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "How they do it can be an issue if they violate people's rights in the process ... but so far we haven't seen any evidence that the Innocent Images investigations were not conducted properly." Prosecutors say a proper warrant was used to seize hundreds of images of child pornography found on Black's home computer. Other say the case does raise questions about online privacy. "I think people have a right to know what the rules are," said David Sobel, a staff lawyer for the Electronic Privacy Information Center. U.S. District Judge Harold Baker is scheduled to hear arguments March 18%n whether to drop the charges against Black. 4-gxss."0 z ---""""^~"""""" S __._i RANKINGS Continued from Page 1A cal significance of the results," Martin said. "I'd question more the relative rating of the factors." Keith Decie, communications direc- tor at the Business School, criticized the way U.S. News weighted informa- tion. "It's a bit ironic that in U.S. News' reputational surveys we're ranked fifth by corporate recruiters and seventh ... by academics, yet we come out 12th overall," Decie said. The Business School's graduate pro- gram was ranked 12th, down one place from last year. All of the University's other schools and colleges were ranked at or above last year's positions. Despite these criticisms, Martin said the higher rankings could help draw more talented students and faculty to the University, saying that students of- ten take the rankings into consider- ation. "The best students want to go to the best institutions," Martin said. "What it can lead to is long-term, good faculty. Good faculty want to go to good schools." Martin described the connection be- tween the rankings, students and fac- ulty as "a self-fulfilling prophecy." Daniel Atkins, dean of the School of Information and Library Studies, said the school's high ranking reflects ef- forts it is making to broaden its curricu- lum. Atkins said the school's offerings will soon include more computer-re- lated fields, including digital publish- ing. "It appears that people approve of us for what we've been and where we're headed both," Atkins said. Atkins said he hopes the school's unique plans will soon give it a rank of first in the nation. "This is real national leadership," he said. "We are producing a school with no national equivalent." Baker said the University's rankings should be viewed in perspective with the graduate schools' specific offer- ings. "If we consistently focus on improv- ing the academic environment and edu- cation offered at Michigan, the high rankings will follow," Baker said. Polls show Israelis favor Netanyahu for prime minister JERUSALEM - After four suicide bombings in nine days killed 61 people and made fear the country's primary political fact, the man known here as "Bibi" stands poised to become Israel's next prime minister in the May 29 elec- tions. Polls show opposition leader Ben- jamin Netanyahu has overtaken Shimon Peres. Peres is under attack and desperately trying to regain support for a peace process that was always fragile, but is being battered even more by each new terrorist act. Netanyahu's newly found popularity comes from his hard-hitting personal style and his party's hard-line message, a combination that has propelled the rise of this smooth, American-educated politician, well known to U.S. televi- sion viewers. Perhaps sobered by the outcry after Rabin's death and the accusations that he helped trigger it, Netanyahu, 46, has refined his political role since the bombings. He won praise for a states- man-like response, calling fornational unity and refrainirng from the anti- government protests he urged after previous attacks. Inmates use tnnel to escape prison ATHENS, Greece - Forty-four in- mates escaped in the chaos of a prison uprising in Corfu yesterday after find- ing an old tunnel that linked the jail to a nearby school. Twelve runaways were captur9 soon after the breakout from the maxi- mum-security prison on the northwest- ern Greek island, and police were searching for the others, police said The identities of the escaped prison-. ers were not immediately known, a po- lice official said,speaking on condition of anonymity. The prison was one of several in Greece where inmates have rioted over the past twio weeks, demanding bet -living conditions and shorter terms. - From Daily wire services The Psychology Peer Advisors Present TeFOCUS GROUPS Winter 1996 APPLYING TO GRADUATE SCHOOL IN PSYCHOLOGY Approaching the Application Process: Writing the Personal Statement, Arranging for Letters of Recommendation and Preparing for Interviews Tuesday, March 12 7:00-9:00 pm, 4th Floor Terrace, East Hall** -Refreshments will be served at all events. -Faculty members and graduate students will be available to answer your questions and discuss these issues. *RSVP to the Peer Advising Office Room 1346 East Engineering at 747-3711 ALL ARE WELCOME!! **Enter East Hall by the main Church St. entrance. Take the elevator to the 3rd floor. When exiting the elevator, turn left around the corner to the first Exit door. Take the stairs to the 4th floor, Peer Advisors will be available to direct you to the terrace. F i Don't Panic!! If you think you're pregnant... call us-we listen, we care. PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP 769-7283 Any time, any day, 24 hours. Fully confidential., Serving Students since 1970. I I The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University ofMichigan. Subscriptions for fall term, stating in September, via U.S. mail are $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $165. On-campus subscriptions 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. 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