2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 28, 1996 NATION/WORLD Continued from Page 1A theft of 8,700 copies yesterday's edition pf The Michigan Daily from campus. Candidates said that without the sched- ules printed in the Daily, students didn't know where and when they could vote. "There's no Dailys around so people don't where to vote," Tudisco said. The MSA Election Code restricts candidates from campaigning within 50 feet of voting tables. With candi- dates stationed in doorways and lob- bies, however, they still have a chance to influence the voters. "You're not interested unless some- one comes up to you and asks you and makes it personal," said LSA first-year student Jaileah Huddleston, who said -she only voted because a candidate ap- proached her as she entered the Shapiro Undergraduate Library to study. "If he hadn't have come up to me, I wouldn't have voted." While some students voted because of convenience or personal appeals, others said they consistently vote in MSA elections. "You can't complain about anything if you don't vote," said Jori Cohen, an LSA senior. MSA President Flint Wainess, who campaigned yesterday for the Michi- gan Party, said student awareness about MSA and campus issues has increased in the last year. "People are talking about MSA - it's setting an agenda on campus," Wainess said. "More people are voting pro-actively and are making informed choices." Liberty Party presidential candidate Martin Howryiak said that although the Liberty Party did campaign yesterday, it tried to stay away from polling sites. "The time for campaigning is before the election," Howrylak said. United Peoples' Coalition vice presi- dential candidate Johnny Su also said last-minute campaigning is unnecessary. "I don't know whether they are vot- ing on an informed basis if they have not been following it all along," Su said. Members of the Students' Party re- fused to comment on the election. Candidates avoided the usually tar- geted Diag yesterday in respect for Hillel's reading of Holocaust victims names. FREE PIZZA!!! FREE PIZZA! ! ! Do you have college credit? Do you need college credit? NO, not course credit, Credit Cards!! Any University of Michigan student that has either used a credit card or wants to use credit cards is invited to join in a 1-hour discussion group. FREE pizza and beverages will be provided. If you are interested, please call 662-6969 to register. PAPERS Continued from Page 1A of the Student Press Law Center in Arlington, Va., said that 37 largescale thefts occurred nationwide in the '93- '94 school year, and that 29 occurred in the '94-'95 year. Goodman said few of the incidents ever repeat themselves, and that admin- istrative and legal reaction is key to preventing a recurrence. "If school officials immediately come forward and say this action can- not be tolerated ... that usually stops it from happening again," Goodman said. Michael Fribush, general manager of The Diamondback, the University of Maryland's student newspaper, said that when a large number of its papers were removed from circulation in 1993, his newspaper made a successful effort to pass a state law against the theft of newspapers. Fribush said about half of The Diamondback's 20,000-21,000 circu- lation was stolen. He said the provoca- tive role of a newspaper must not be forgotten. "When you're at a newspaper, whether you write about race or write about anything, if you get complaints, you know you're doing something right," Fribush said. UPC vice presidential candidate Johnny Su said that even though a quote from a Daily editorial that al- luded to his party was mentioned in the fliers, he does not consider the Daily to be racist, merely irresponsible in its coverage of small MSA parties. He said he knows nothing about the thefts, noting that just because an ex- cerpt from a Daily editorial was used as an example of alleged racism, the party should in no way be connected to the thefts. "I have no idea who took the papers," Su said. Althea Capul, an LSA sophomore running with UPC, said the removals were "unethical." "The Daily has a responsibility to be open-minded and as fair as they can be, but they're still a newspaper and have a right to say what they want about stu- dent parties," Capul said. "The removal ofthe papers is deplor- able. It just makes for bad feelings all around. It's just plain petty." - Daily Staff Reporter MattBucklev contributed to this report. Check out the Daily online at: h -tp.://www pub. umich. edu/daily/ Maker of Ritalin warns against nisuse NEWARK, N.J. - Stung by reports that schoolchildren are snorting and injecting the drug Ritalin to get high, the primary maker of the hyperactivity medicine has begun a campaign to curb its abuse. Ciba Pharmaceuticals is sending pam- phlets on the proper use of the drug to more than 100,000 pharmacists and 110,000 doctors this week, hoping they will pass them onto school nurses and parents. "We want to reach the people who may be treating the medication a little too casually," said Todd Forte, a spokesperson for Swiss drug and chemical maker Ciba-Geigy Corp.'s U.S. pharmaceutical subsidiary in Summit, N.J. While Ritalin has been used for more than 40 years, abuse has grown in recent years as more children are diag- nosed with attention deficit-hyperac- tivity disorder, which leaves children inattentive, impulsive and sometimes uncontrollable. , A report by the United Nations last d Dems thwart GOP wilderness proposal WASHINGTON - Senate Democrats turned back a Re- publican wilderness proposal yesterday, maintaining that while 2 million acres of fedefal land in Utah would be protected, millions more would be opened to mining and development. The Utah wilderness provision deadlocked the Senate for nearly three days as Democrats refused to accept a broader publics land bill unless the section on Utah wilderness was stripped away. After the bill's supporters, including Utah's two senators, failed to get the required 60 votes to cut off debate, Majority Leader Bob Dole (R-Kan.) withdrew the entire bill from consideration. The vote was 51-49. It represented a major victory for environmentalists who had seen a string of setbacks in recent weeks in the Senate, including the inabilit to lift a moratorium on new endangered species listings, passage of a grazing bi that gives ranchers greater say in federal rangeland management and a failure t reverse salvage logging policy enacted last year. "We're thrilled," said a beaming Melanie Griffin, legislative director of th Sierra Club. "This could be a real turning point." The meetings will be held either Tuesday, April 3 or ednesday, April 4.3 on Join us. Call 76-DAILY. HAPPY HOUR month said the drug is now so commoa place that 3 percent to 5 percent of a U.S. schoolchildren take it each day - between 1.5 million and 2.5 millio children. Parishioners may be excommunicated * LINCOLN, Neb. - When Joa Johnson was in parochial school, th nuns taught her to pray and obey. Bi they also encouraged her to think ind pendently. Because of that, Johnson says, sh faces excommunication from the Rc man Catholic Church. Bishop Fabian BruskewitzoftheLi' coin Diocese has threatened to exc municate parishioners who belonl 12 groups, including Planned Pareni hood, Call to Action and Catholics fe a Free Choice. In a warning in the diocesan news paper, Bruckewitz told Catholics t sever ties with the groups by May 1 or consider themselves excommuni cated. Johnson doubts that she will quitCt to Action Nebraska. .9 message from God" to help the Pale~ tinians. Libyan leader Col. Moanmm Gadhafi reportedly spoke with one c the hijackers. Rains kill 55, spur@4 possible cholera outbreak in Angola LUANDA, Angola-Flooding an mudslideshavekilled 55 peopleacro Angola over the past two weeks an torrential rains threaten to unleash cholera epidemic in the capital, N tional Radio reported yesterday. In Luanda alone, 16 people' killed in flooding and mudslides froi Sunday to Tuesday in one neighb9 hood near the presidential palace. Areas of the capital remain isolate by flooding, while others are affecte by stagnant water filled with garbag Luanda's provincial public heali director, Dr. Vemba Vita, warned ye terday that the capital "runs the riski an unprecedented outbreak of chole because all the conditions are prest - From Daily wire servic RIT ti g I MON -FRI 9:30 PM-MIDNIGHT $4.00 TANS NO SERVICE CHARGES!!! 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The Airbus A320, en route from Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, to Cairowas hijacked after stopping in the southern Egyptian city of Luxor, a tourist locale famous for its spectacular Pharaonic ruins. The 152passengers,including'17Japa- nese, 59 Canadians and a number of French citizens, were freed in Libya's Mediterranean city of Martubah, 150 miles west of Egypt. Airport officials said none of the passengers was Ameri- can. "The hijackers did not ask anything of the passengers," Prime Minister Kamal el-Ganzoury told reporters in Cairo. "The passengers are OK. They were not badly treated." The hijackers insisted on an audi- ence with the heads of the United States, Egypt and Libya to present "a U If you LOVI then have we got a job for you! * ' . \S X r ti ''I ~49.-jjf: Converse is looking for a highly motivated person who loves the game of hoop, to help us introduce the hottest new basketball shoe to come along in years. We're looking for someone to work with local retailers and conduct product dinis, as well as spend time in the community educating people about our shoe. The qualified candidate is someone who can communicate well, meet deadlines, and is detail-oriented. So if you own a car, and would like to get solid experience in sales promotion and marketing, send your resume to: Sarah Mann c/o Triple Dot 45 Bromfield Street Boston, MA 02108 617.292.8928fax ml CONGRATULATES MICHIGAN'S CLASS OF 96 BEST WISHES TO YOU ALL! STOP IN AND MEET 2 ADDITIONS TO OUR "FAMILY": The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through -riday during tne tail ano winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fal term, starting 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 764-0 Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.Jetters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/. EDITORIAL Glassberg, Editor NEWS Amy Klein, Managing Editor EDITORS: Tim O'Connell, Megan Schimpf, Michelle Lee Thompson. Josh White. STAFF: Patience Atkin. Matthew Buckley, Jodi Cohen, Sam T. Dudek, Jeff Eldridge. Kate Glickman, Lisa Gray, Jennifer Harvey. Stephanie Jo Klein, Marisa Ma. Laurie Mayk. Heather Miller. Anupama Reddy. Alice Robinson. Matthew Smart, Ann Stewart, Carissa Van Heest, Christopher Wan. Katie Wang, Will Weissert, Maggie Weyhing. CALENDAR:Matthew Buckley. EDITORIAL Adrienne Janney, Zachary M. Raimi, Editors STAFF: Kate Epstein, Niraj R. Ganatra, Ephraim R. Gerstein. Joe Gigiotti. Keren Kay Hahn, Katie Hutchins, Chris Kaye, Jim Lasser. Erin Marsh. Brent McIntosh, Trisha Miller, Steven Musto, Paul Serilla, Jordan Stancil, Ron Steiger, Jason Stoffer, Jean Twenge, Matt Wimsatt. SPORTS Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Managing Ed* EDITORS: John Leroi. Brent McIntosh, Barry Solenberger. STAFF: Donald Adamek, Paul Barger, Nancy Berger. Susan Dann, Darren Everson, Jiten Ghelani, Alan Goldenbach. James Goldstein, Jeremy Horelick, Jennifer Houdilik. Chaim Hyman, Kevin Kasiborski, Andy Knudsen, Marc Lightdale, Will McCahill, Chris Murphy, Sharat Raju, Pranay Reddy, Jim Rose, Michael Rosenberg, Danielle Rumore, Richard Shin. Mark Snyder, Dan Stillman, Doug Stevens. Ryan White. ARTS Dean Bakopoulos, Joshua Rich, Editors WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Kari Jones, Elan Stavros. SUB-EDITDRS: Melissa Rose Bernardo (Theater), Brian A. Gnatt (Music), Jennifer Petlinski (Film), Ted Watts (Fine Arts). James Wilson (Books). STAFF: Coln Bartos. Eugene Bowen, Jennifer Buckley. Neal C. Carruth. Christopher Corbett, Jeffrey Dinsmore, Tim Furlong. Lise Harwin. Emily Lambert, Bryan Lark, Kristin Long, Elizabeth Lucas, James Miller, Greg Parker, Heather Phares, Ryan Posly. Michael Rosenberg. Dave Snyder. Prashant Tamaskar, Alexandra Twin, Kelly Xintaris. Michael Zilberman. PHOTO Mark Friedman, Jonathan Lurie, Editors STAFF: Josh Biggs. Jennifer Bradley-Swift. Tonya Broad, Diane Cook, Nopporn Kichanantha, Margaret Myers. Stephanie Grace Lim, Elizabeth Lippman. Kristen Schaefer, Sara Stillman. Walker VanDyke, Joe Westrate, Warren Zinn. COPY DESK Elizabeth Lucas, Editor STAFF: Matt Benz, Jodi Cohen, Lili Kalish, Jill Litwin, Heather Miller, Matt Spewack- ONLINE . Scott Wilcox, Editor STAFF: Dennis Fitzgerald, Jeffrey Greenstein, Charles Harrison. Travis Patrick. Victoria Salipande. Matthew Smart, Joe Westrate, Anthony Zak. 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