2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 19, 1996 Blizzard lashes Plains with snow, strong wind MAIrlom/woluLD The Associated Press A blizzard that seemed to come out - of nowhere fast blasted the Plains, stranding drivers overnight in their cars and forcing hundreds of students to sleep on carpets and gym mats at school. In Minnesota, authorities ordered even snowplows offthe roads and threat- ened to arrest any drivers making non- emergency trips. Hundreds ofaccidents were reported. The storm dumped more than a foot of snow in parts of Minnesota, Ne- braska, Wisconsin and the Dakotas. It knocked out power to thousands of homes in several states and forced schools and offices to close. Tornadoes tore off roofs in Arkansas and Texas, where winds gusted to 110 mph. Two men were killed when the roof of a store collapsed in Anthony, Texas. The storm caught many by surprise because it moved in so quickly after a LAWSUIT Continued from Page 2. million civil lawsuit against the Uni- versity last January, which was de- layed pending the outcome of the ar- bitration . Peterson said the arbitration agree- ment could have an impact on the law- suit, which is slated to begin in Washtenaw County Circuit Court on June 10. Arbitration is a voluntary process included in the University's grievance procedure. Peterson said an arbitrator looks at all available information and decides what appropriate internal ac- tion should be taken. The National Women's Rights Or- ganizing Coalition, a leftist group that encourages "militant civil rights ac- tivism," has backed the three former :dental school employees in their claim that the firings were "racially moti- vated." Religous Services AVAVAVAVA LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH Lutheran Campus Ministry (ELCA) 801 S. Forest (at Hill), 668-7622 Sunday Worship 10 a.m. Wednesday Evening Prayer 7 p.m. Thurs. Study/Discussion 7 p.m. Friday Free Movies 7 p.m UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL, LCMS 1511 Washtenaw, near Hill SATURDAY: Worship 6:30 p.m. SUNDAY; Worship 10:30 a.m. Pastor Ed Krauss 663-5560 spell ofmild weather. In Waterloo, Iowa, it was a balmy 54 degrees on Wednes- day; yesterday, the wind chill hit 50 degrees below zero. In Minnesota, wind gusting to 60 mph pushed the wind chill down to 86 degrees below zero at Hallock. "We went out Wednesday just once and that was for food," said Irma Abel, a Hallock resident. "We'll be staying out of this stuff today." National Guardsmen helped rescue stranded motorists in Polk County, Minn., but elsewhere, even rescuers had to stay indoors. "We're not sure whether there are people stranded out there or not," Min- nesota State Patrol dispatcher Roxanne Engum said. "Because of the zero vis- ibility, we can't get out there." At one point, more than 200 cars were stranded in Nebraska. "There are people running low on NATIONAL REPORT W Funeral home ends AIDS discriminion WASHINGTON -Pressed by the Justice Department, a&Virginia funeral home agreed yesterday to stop charging extra for embalming bodies of people who die of AIDS or its complications. It was the first settlement under the Americans With Disabilities Act involving funeral home discrimination on the basis of AIDS. The Fisher Funeral Home of Portsmouth, Va., also agreed to reimburse and damages to nine families that Justice investigators found were charged $300 e for embalming. Without admitting any violations of law, the funeral home also agreed to adopt a policy against AIDS discrimination, which is barred by the disabilities act, and to train its employees. Rules issued in 1991 by the federal Occupational Safety and Health Adminis- tration, based on recommendations of the Centers for Disease Control, require morticians and funeral home employees to treat all bodies as if they have an infectious, blood-borne disease. As a result, the Justice Department said, there is no legal basis for charging more when the deceased had AIDS or any other disease. "Charging additional fees for the same service, especially when grievin families are involved, is simple discrimination," said Assistant Attorney Gen Deval L. Patrick, head of the department's civil rights division. AP PHOTO Oklahoma State University seniors Chris Evers of Wichita, Kan. (left) and Dustin Bunch of Kansas City, Mo., use their hats, gloves and a newspaper to shield their heads from the cold wind as they walk to class In Stillwater, Okla., yesterday. fuel and we're making them a priority," said Maj. Andy Lundy of the Nebraska State Patrol. About 400 students and teachers spent the night at two schools in Kearney, Neb. "It just hit so fast, it was a whiteout. The buses just couldn't go anywhere," Principal Jerry Menke said. "The kids thought it was OK, it was kind of like a slumber party, but it was a big one." UC regents postpone proposal to restore affirmative action policies SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Six months after dropping affirmative ac- tion in hiring and admissions, the Uni- versity of California's regents post- poned action yesterday on a proposal to restore race and gender considerations. "it is simply untimely for us to sit here and debate this today," Regent Bill Bagley said. Two proposals were before a joint committee of regents. One, introduced by Student Regent Ed Gomez, would have rescinded the July 20 vote that eliminated affirma- tive action in hiring, contracting and admissions. The other, from Regent Judith Levin, would have imposed a one-year moratorium on the new polli- ties. After apublic comment session and a two-hour presentation from faculty, the committee members voted 12-4 to post- pone indefinitely any discussion of Gomez's proposal. Levin requested that her proposal be withdrawn, saying she didn't believe it would pass. She said she would reintroduce it in March. The joint committees could have tabled the proposals, voted them down or referred them for consideration by the full board. Last summer's vote by the 26-mem- ber board, seen at the time as the first major victory for anti-affirmative ac- tion forces, has drawn protests from both students and faculty. The academic senates of all nine UC campuses have voted to ask the regents to reverse the decision, and students have protested at almost ev- ery meeting. About 100 people attended yesterday's public comment session. Ten students were arrested, cited for disturbing a public meeting and tres- passing, and then were released. As students were led away by cam- pus police officers, they slapped an orange-and-black sticker reading "Re- claim our Education" over theirmouths. During the faculty presentation, so- ciology Prof. Dana Tagaki of UC-Santa Cruz urged the board to "do the right thing" and reverse its decision. Mrs. Clinton's record questioned by aide WASHINGTON - Adding further intrigue to the discovery of Hillary Rodham Clinton's legal billing records, a presidential aide testified yesterday the documents appeared on a table in the White House residence two years after investigators subpoenaed them. Carolyn Huber told the Senate Whitewater Committee she went to the book room in the White House resi- dence every two or three days and that she unexpectedly found the records there early last August, She said they were folded but in plain view, on a pile of books on the corner of a table where they hadn't beenjust days earlier. "They appeared there," Huber testi- fied. "I thought it had been left there for me to take down to put in the file-- you know, to file in the filing that I do." She said she was certain the records had not been there earlier. "I don't think I would have missed them," she said. Huber testified the book room was mainly for the Clintons and their guests, but was accessible to herself andsome other White House aides. The room is next door to Mrs. Clinton's office in the residence Committee Chairman Alfonse D'Amato (R-N.Y.), who has previ- ously rejected calls to ask Mrs. Clinton to testify, said the testimony may prompt him to submit written q* tions to the first lady. Rear guards on truck trailers to change WASHINGTON - A car sliding under the back of a tractor-trailer may be a spectacular conclusion to a movie chase scene. But in reality, such crashes result in more than 400 deaths a year. The government's highway sa$ agency on yesterday announced rear truck guards on trailers should be low- ered by 8 inches to help prevent such deaths. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration directly attributes 50 to 60 deaths each year to the shearing of a car's upper passenger compartment by the rear metal of the truck, and esti- mates the new federal rule would se up to 15 lives a year. NCI: Beta carotene pills might hurt smokers °:/ ' WASHINGTON (AP) - Beta caro- tene supplements do not protect Ameri- cans against cancer or heart disease, and might actually increase smokers' risk of deadly lung tumors, the govern- ment declared yesterday. National Cancer Institute researchers shut down a vitamin study of 18,000 smokers last week, almost two years early, because too many of those being given high doses of beta carotene were dying. There were 28 percent more lung cancers and 17 percent more deaths among beta carotene takers than smok- ers who took dummy pills. A second U.S. study also found that people who took beta carotene pills wasted their money. "Beta carotene is no magic bullet," saidNCI DirectorDr. Richard Klausner. Is it really dangerous for smokers? Klausner's not sure, but said. "There is one very clear message: The only way to reduce your (cancer) risk is to stop smoking." But the doctors emphasized that doesn't mean people should avoid car- rots and other vitamin-packed veg- etables and fruits. These studies merely prove that popping the pills can't re- place the high-fiber, low-fat benefits.-- in those foods. "A beta carotene supplement neither substitutes for a good diet nor compen- sates for a bad one," said Dr. Charles Flennekens of larvard Medical School. who led the physicians' study. Americans usually consume 2 or 3 milligrams of it daily, and many multi- vitamins contain another 6 or so milli- grams. The NC-sponsored studies fed people about 10 times the average American's consumption,on the theory that mega-doses might protect against heart disease or cancer by soaking up dangerous oxygen molecules that can damage cells. "Disappointingly," Klausner said, the studies "revealed no benefit." The first study, run by the University of Washington's Dr. Gilbert Omenn, fo- ]owed for an average offour years 18.314 heavy smokers or recent quitters. Bosnia POW release deadline today SARAJEVO. Bosnia-Herzegovina --- On his first visit to Bosnia since the signing of the Balkan peace accord he helped deliver, a top U.S. envoy urged the government yesterday to meet a looming deadline for releasing POWs. "Will there be 100-percent compli- ance?" asked Richard C. Holbrooke, assistant secretary of state for Europe. "Tune in." Hlolbrooke pressured Bosnian lead- ers to agree to free prisoners of war by today, set in the peace accord signed last month in Paris. The Muslim-led government has re- fused to surrender its prisoners until rebel Serbs account for about 20,000 people the government lists as missing. Most Bosnians believe those people are dead. The release of about 900 POWs is the pact's first milestone, along with the withdrawal of factions from front lines to create a 2 1/2-mile buffer zone. The troop pull-back appears to be proceed- ing well today, but failure to swap pris- oners could overshadow that success. "We are insisting on full cornpli- ance," Holbrooke said after meeting with Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic. Hedidnotsaywhatconse- quences the government could face for refusing. alleged corruption shakes India's rulers NEW DELHI, India-Already,some are calling it India's Watergate. But in this subcontinental version of the po- litical scandal of the century, both Democrats and Republicans have been implicated. With nationwide elections only tl' monthsaway,amessyandwideningpro e into high-level official corruption has shaken the usually smug ruling circles of the world's largest democracy. Yesterday, President Shankar Dayal Sharma accepted the resignations of three Cabinet ministers. The president of the leading opposition party in par- liament had resigned earlier. A total of nine politicians of national stature have been accused by investiga- tors of receiving some of the s18.3rW lion in "hawala" - laundered money. - From Daily wire services c ftWIN FREE :: E :.ELA 3MWAL P303HA M RooM & BOARD FOR NEXT FALL..... ...OR be one of over 30 students to WIN FREE Board for Fa.l 1996, Entree Plus $$, School Supplies, CDs, or Tapes. Cruise by UNIVERSITY HOUSING'S ::.,, .PROGRESSIVE r.*v 'r".P {s: DINNER & OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, JANUARY21, 1996 FROM 3 To 6PM Shuttle bus tours sot at the CC litte bus 30 minutes (35:30pni). shutte serviepwded Am between Open House locations. 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E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu .nrow CTACC 1m;h a1 .cahar V i r in Chia f FI]ITOR10I -%TAFF IVIIC119m NosenDBre ralt0[ 111 tinier R CUI I VNIAL i nrr ITIMINOWN nVolull"Wigy 16ultpg M NEWS Nate Hurley, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jonathan Berndt, Lisa Dines, Andrew Taylor, Scot Woods. STAFF: Stu Berlow, Cathy Boguslaski, Kiran Chaudhri, Jodi Cohen, Sam T. Dudek, Jeff Eldridge, Lenny Feller, Ronnie Glassberg, Kate Glickman, Jennifer Harvey, Amy Klein, Stephanie Jo Klein,. Jeff Lawson, Laurie Mayk, Will McCahill, Heather Miller, Soumya Mohan, Laura Nelson, Tim O'Connell, Lisa Poris, Anupama Reddy, Megan Schimpf, Matthew Smart. Michelle Lee Thompson, Katie Wang, Will Weissert, Josh White. CALENDAR: Josh White. EDITORIAL Julie Becker, James M. Nash, Edito ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Adrienne Janney, Zachary M. Raimi. STAFF: Bobby Angel, Patience Atkin, Ephraim R. Gerstein, Keren Kay Hahn. Judith Kafka, Chris Kaye. Jeff Keating. Joel F. Knutson, Jim Lasser, Ann Markey. 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