2 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, December 2, 1996 NATION/WORLD BOLLINGER Continued from Page i Bollinger will move into the president's residence on South University Avenue. The final plans for Bollinger's inau- guration are also undetermined. "We're deciding between late in the winter term or in the fall," Harrison said. At the very least, the inaugural season will consist of a formal ceremony, probably in Hill Auditorium, and an open cele- bration for members of the University community, Harrison said. "I think Lee feels quite strongly that the inauguration will be held while stu- dents are here," Harrison said. Regent-elect Olivia Maynard (D- Plint) said she is "pleasantly surprised" that Bollinger's presidency is slated to begin in February. Maynard will likely spend most - if not all - of her eight-year term work- ing with Bollinger But she said it has not been frustrating to watch from the sidelines while the first stages of his presidency are organized. "I feel very positive about him," said Maynard, whose term will begin in January. "I think it will be exciting for the future of the University." Students will benefit from Bollinger's quick transition, said Michigan Student Assembly President Fiona Rose. "What this University needs is a stable presidency as soon as possible'" Rose said. "He's open-minded, and he has a lot of great ideas for Michigan." Stavis said the Dartmouth communi- ty has known Bollinger could be tapped for a presidency at almost any time. "Lee Bollinger is an eminent scholar and a talented administrator" Stavis said. "With all eminent scholars and tal- ented administrators, one knows that they're all in demand." AIDS. Continued from Page 1. AIDS mortality rates, the official newspaper called for intensified con- dom promotion campaigns. It said more men were using condoms after a nationwide anti-AIDS campaign began several years ago. To call attention to AIDS among American Indians, a sculpture was shrouded in black nylon outside Phoenix's Heard Museum, renowned for its collection of Indian art. AIDS cases among Native Americans in the United States have doubled in three years, to 1,439 this year. European activists warned against complacency. In Paris, several hundred AIDS activists marched with signs reading, "AIDS: The Epidemic Isn't Over" and "Zero Equals the Number of AIDS Survivors." In Rome, two taxi companies distrib- uted AIDS information leaflets to pas- sengers, and some players in Italy's top soccer league wore red bows on their uniforms. HOLIDAY Continued from Page 1 Judon guessed that out of the rough- ly 600 residents in her hall, about 50 stayed for Thanksgiving. "1 was glad to be with my friends, but I would have rather been home," Judon said. Judon also said she did not have to stay, but by covering her RA duties over Thanksgiving, she will have a better chance of going away for Spring Break. Some University faculty members said they also remained in Ann Arbor for Thanksgiving. Psychiatry and Social Work Prof. Edith Gomberg said she spent Thanksgiving Day with some of her family and a few of her colleagues. "We do it sort of potluck;" Gomberg said. "Everybody is responsible for a different dish." Gomberg said she and her friends take turns having dinner at each other's homes and she is thankful for the time they have together. "I have spent Thanksgiving alone and, let me tell you, family and friends are better,' Gomberg said. k,}, y> ;a, Southern twister kills 3, uproots trees. SIMSBORO, La. - More than 100 old oak trees were strewn amid the wreck- age of homes yesterday along the path of a tornado that ripped through town. Three people were killed. The storm Saturday night destroyed six homes and damaged 49, while over- turning trucks on a nearby highway and blowing a wall off a factory. Tornadoes also skipped across parts of Mississippi, Alabama and the Florio Panhandle, causing scattered damage and injuries. Emergency teams and volunteers helped this northern Louisiana community about 45 miles east of Shreveport clean up yesterday. Power was restored to most homes by morning. "l'm just glad we didn't die" said 8-year-old Sara Solomon. She and herY10- year-old sister, Kasey, huddled on the hallway floor of their home when the storm hit. "A tree fell on our house. We started crying because we were so scared," Sara said. Some of the fallen oak trees had been standing for generations. One that wis 5 feet in diameter crushed the cab of a parked pickup truck, killing two men w were inside installing a radio. A man sitting between them survived with r17 minor injuries. Su reme Court to de ate Brady Act WASHINGTON - For seven years, a wheelchair-bound James S. Brady and his wife, Sarah, fought for passage of national legislation to regulate the sale of handguns. They were unrelent- ing advocates, pitted against the lob- byists of the National Rifle Association. They watched a bill requiring buyer- background checks die, get revived, cause a congressional standoff and finally, in late 1993, pass both houses to become the first major gun-control law in a quarter century. The Brady Act was immediately challenged by local sheriffs, who must perform the background checks, as an unconstitutional infringement on their power. Now, the most controversial gun- control bill of the era has reached the Supreme Court, just as the justices are questioning whether Congress is imposing too much of its will on local authorities. Oral arguments on the case are set for tomorrow. "The American people won a great victory over the"gun lobby 2 1/2years ago," Brady said at a recent news con- ference. "I hope, and trust, that the high court will not mess with .suc- cess." Bacteria vaccine created for infants WASHINGTON - A Harvard physician has developed a vaccine that one day could protect thousands, of babies from a potentially deadly infec- tion that mothers now try to avoid by taking powerful antibiotics during childbirth. The threat is group B streptooce. a bacterium that lurks harmlessly in many women's bodies but that can be fatal or brain-damaging if passed to infants in the birth canal. The National Institutes of Health plans to immunize some pregnant women late next year in studies designed to prove the vaccine is safe enough - and works well enough -to administer to millions of women. S .. '3 ',y ; ;'3 s ,. fi.', .. t< q .:. Because all-niqhters arer't always spentii Mother Teresa in critical condition CALCUTTA, India -- Mother Teresa was in critical condition yesterday, weakened.by lung and kidney problems that slowed her recovery from surgery to clear blocked coronary arteries. The 86-year-old nun remains "con- scious and cheerful," Calcutta's B.M. Birla Heart Research Center said in a statement. Doctors reprogrammed a pacemaker implanted in 1989 but because of her worsening condition postponed planned drug treatment to correct her irregular heartbeat. At her Missionaries of Charity home, the West Bengal state minister led Catholic nuns and Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs and Buddhists in prayers for her recovery. The 1979 Nobel Peace Prize winner suffered a mild heart attack on Nov. 22, and has been hospitalized ever since. It is her fourth hospitalization this year alone - the second for heart problems. Two others were for injuries from falls. Doctors performed an angioplasty Friday to remove blockages from two arteries. The procedure went so well that doctors thought they would be able to begin drug treatment yesterday for an irregular heartbeat. Peace force faces difficulties in Zaire GOMA, Zaire --As a multinational peace force prepares to send a small team into eastern Zaire to lay the groundwork for a Rwandan-refugee rescue mission, it faces the predicament of how safely extricate the refugees who are at W moving front line of a mountain war. The roughly 200,000 Rwandan Hutu refugees believed to be in the fores.ted mountains about 17 miles west of here include thousands of former Rwandan soldiers and militiamen. Those forces control two large refugee groups here in North Kivu Province and are driving them west- ward, away from the border. - Compiled from Daily wire repor. the library E* 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 $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, yearlong (September through April) is $165. 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David Ward, Jen Woodward, ONLINE Scott Wilcox, Editor STAFF: Dana Goldberg. Jeffrey Greenstein, Charles Harrison, Anuj Hasija, Adam Pollock, Vanshi Thandra, Anthony Zak. GRAPHICS Melanie Sherman, Editor F sll~lIIC o!A le0-'-L .N n t Q c Vn IA~r!m .n A ioRsQ scCC c'rArr c,.:s. Ln aMMt n ar zrscsrsncc M!%n!mcsdr1 -A