2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 6, 1996 NATION/WORLD Dole advisers quit after control dispute WASHINGTON (AP) -- Bob Dole's struggling presidential cam- paign suffered another setback yes- terday when his two top media advis- ers quit after a dispute with cam- paign manager Scott Reed over who should control Dole's television advertising. Don Sipple and Mike Murphy, who have sparred for some time with top campaign officials over strategy, left the operation after Reed ordered a reorga- nization designed to integrate the media team more directly into the campaign and give others a greater voice in plan- ning Dole's ads. Campaign officials said Sipple and Murphy would be replaced by three other GOP media consultants, Greg Stevens, Alex Castellanos and Chris Mottola, although there were indica- tions yesterday that officials were still trying to work out the new struc- ture. The staff shuffle, the second major shake-up in Dole's operation this year, came at an awkward time for President Clinton in the polls and the campaign facing crucial decisions about how to overtake him with two months remaining. The abrupt changes caused dismay among Republicans outside the cam- paign. "This is certainly not the way you draw them up on the chalkboard," a senior Republican official said. Campaign officials sought to down- play the disruption in bringing in the year's third media team. "We are mak- ing an effort to put together an advertis- ing team that will effectively communi- cate Bob Dole's economic plan and the contrast between Dole and his oppo- nent,' communications director John Buckley said. "We think we've made a positive step and this will help us com- municate over the course of the next nine weeks." Murphy, calling the divorce "ami- cable," said he and Sipple had quit over "some operational differences on how the advertising and strategy should be conducted and this is the best solution for everybody." Sipple said he and Murphy strongly believed "that political advertising profession- Molecule may repair sickle cell genes WASHINGTON - A synthetic molecule that corrects the gene mutation that causes sickle cell anemia could be ready to test on human patients within a year, researchers say. The gene repair molecule that has proven itself in laboratory cultures was dcvcl- oped by scientists at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia. They already have tested it on blood cells from patients with sickle cell anemia, a severe blood disorder that affects more than 50,000 Americans, most of them black. Eric Kmiec, head of the Jefferson team, said the same type of molecule may a* be used to repair genes that cause some other inherited diseases, such as cystic fibro- sis and Gaucher's disease. "We were not after a cure for sickle cell anemia," said Kmiec. "We were trying to demonstrate that you can do gene therapy inside a chromosome by correcting a specific mutation." The team is now talking with Food and Drug Administration officials as a first step toward getting approval to try the technique in patients, he said, adding that it could be ready for human testing within 12 months. "This is a very important first step toward doing gene therapy in a new way," said Dr. Donald Kohn, a gene therapy expert at the Children's Hospital in Los Angeles. "I think this is exciting and very important." Sickle cell anemia is caused when people inherit a mutation in a gene that dire red blood cell production. AP PHOTO GOP presidential candidate Bob Dole gives the thumb up at the Republican National Convention in San Diego. Third from the right in the patterned shirt Is Mike Murphy. als should be in charge of advertis- ing." Last spring, Reed set up a separate advertising unit, called New Century Media, and granted Sipple and Murphy, two of the party's leading ad the Dole Republican campaign, nominee with the trailing Should I be thinking about Grad school? Law School Business School 1 "" Graduate School heed fOtIeq/ t.ekets VO1 Medical School t he 0 do ge %07 iso V%01% c _L i a _. SWh re e p r~ , j Age a I r Tough questions for your first year... -KAPLAN 1-800- KAP-TEST makers, considerable autonomy to develop Dole's media strategy. But campaign officials complained yesterday that Sipple and Murphy - two strong-willed operatives who are used to having their way in statewide campaigns - had operated with too much independence and had not been receptive to making full use of the cam- paign's research and the ideas of other officials. "There was a decision that we could have a better integration of the campaign strategy and the data in everything we do," one senior official said. Another official complained that the few ads oroduced since the con- vention by the Sipple-Murphy team were "flat" and "didn't help sell the economic program and get trac- tion." But others said the dispute had less to do with the content of the ads and more to do with control, with cam- paign officials wanting the ad makers "to spend a lot of time in meetings, a lot of group think. They wanted lots of time with scripts and with focus groups." One source said Murphy, who earlier this summer lost an internal power struggle, had privately complained that the Dole effort was embarrassingly weak and that he and Sipple should have overall control of both advertising and message. JOIN THE MICHIGAN DAILY. COME TO A MASS MEETING SEPT. 11, 15 OR 17 AT 7 P.M. AT 420 MAYNARD. RELIGIOUS AVAVAVAVA CAMPUS CHAPEL Christian Reformed Campus Ministry 1236 Washtenaw Ct.668-7421 (one block south of CCRB) SUNDAY WORSHIP: l0a.m.-"The Foolishness of Faith" 11:15a.m.-Picnic on Chapel lawn WEDNESDAY: 9-10:15p.m.-Student Gathering: proactive discussion, fun, food Rev. Don Postema, Pastor Ms. Kyla Ebels Assistant for Student Ministry GUILD HOUSE CAMPUS MINISTRY 802 Monroe 662-5189 Weekly Events: Mondays 8:30-10:00PM Open Poetry; 2nd&4th Mondays Noon-1:00 Women's Book Group; Every 2nd Wednesday Supper Forum 5:15- 7:15PM S.I.GN. (Students Involved for the Global Neighborhood) 5-7PM Topic & Dinner KOREAN CHRUCH OF ANN ARBOR 3301 Creek Dr. 971-9777 Sunday: 9:30 a.m. English, 11 a.m. & 7:30 p.m. Korean LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH 801 S.Forest (at Hill St.) 668-7622 SUNDAY: Worship at 10 a.m. WED.: Evening Prayer-7 Choir-7:30 THURS.: Issues of Faith Group-7:00 John Rollefson & Meg Drum Campus Ministers PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH Contemporary worship services at 9:00 am and 12 noon on Sundays. Bible study for students at 10:30 am. 2580 Packard Road 971-0773 small-group Bible studies and student activities weekly. ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL CHURCH (Anglican Communion) 306 N. Division 663-0518 (2 blocks north and 1 block west ofintersection of Huron and State) SUNDAY: Eucharists-8am and 10am Adult Education-9am Call for: weekday service times, Accused Mexican rapist burned alive MEXICO CITY - As dozens of people watched, a man was tied to a tree, doused with a flammable liquid and set ablaze. As he died, writhing, a video camera rolled. All day yesterday, television stations across Mexico broadcast the gruesome footage of vigilante justice, the latest in a series of incidents in which Mexican townsfolk, fed up with crime, have taken the law into their hands. Residents of Playa Vicente in the Gulf Coast state of Veracruz had accused the man, identified as Rodolfo Soler Hernandez, of raping and stran- gling a woman last Saturday. A close-up of the man before the exe- cution indicated he had been badly beaten. Shots taken later Saturday showed him twitching and jerking as flames consumed his body. His corpse finally slumped forward in its bonds. Veracruz Attorney General Rodolfo Duarte Rivas said yesterday his office had investigated the burning, as well as the videotaping and distribution of the $1M underpass saving bears' lives MOUNT PLYMOUTH, Fla. - Until recently, a short stretch of State Road 46 near here was the deadliest place for Florida's threatened popula- tion of black bears. Crossing the scenic two-lane blacktop highway in search of acorns, blueberries or a mate, the bears too often ended up as road kill. Since 1976, in fact, more than 20 black bears have died after run-ins with vehicles on Route 46, which bisects the animals' traditional central Florida range along the Wekiva River, just 25 miles north of Orlando. "It was always sad to go pick one up, to see themsplat- tered like that," said biologist Jayde Root. "Especially if there were cubs." Now the bears have a way to cross safely, through a wide concrete under- pass that cost $1 million to build and has sparked at least one eccentric protest in this bucolic area of tall pines and low human density. Months after the underpass was completed in December 1994, a human dressed in a gorilla suit showed up one night to prance around in front of a flash camera triggered by an infrared beani that was set up to record animal crossings. Citadel loses 16 male cadets, retains four women ! CHARLESTON S.C. - "Hell Week" claimed 16 first-year cadets at The Citadel, but not the four women who have broken the military school's 153-year-old all-male tradition. Known officially as Cadre Week, the first-year class' first week includes extensive physical and mental chal- lenges thrown at them by upperclass- men. The four women are among 565 so dents still enrolled, spokesperson Terry Leedoi said Wednesday. The Cadre Week attrition was lower than last year, when two dozen students dropped out, including Shannon Faulkner, who fell ill on the first day and dropped out after a tourt order made her The Citadel's first female cadet. IMOT tape. "We have identified those responsi- ble," he said, adding that the body was being exhumed and an autopsy planned as part of a criminal investigation. No arrests were immediately reported. Speaking on the television netw@ Azteca, Duarte Rivas said the killing was the act of a few - not of the whole town -. and that the videotape had been shot in such a way as to falsely indicate a wider participation. Russians bury banknotes in silos MOSCOW - Defunct Sov t money is going the way of defi Soviet missiles - literally. Russia's Central Bank has buried at least 180 metric tons of old Soviet ban- knotes, out of circulation since 1990, in abandoned missile silos near the town of Kostroma, about 200 miles north of Moscow, the daily Komsomolskaya Pravda reported yesterday. Twenty-eight silos, each 132 feet deep with a diameter of nearly 10 feet, have been filled with the notes and seas with concrete, the newspaper wrote. I I i a~ail The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during he ral and winter terms uy 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. On-campus sub- scriptions 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. 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PHOTO Mark Friedman, Editor ASSISTANT EDITOR: Sara Stillman. STAFF: Josh Biggs, Jennifer Bradley-Swift. Bohdan Damian Cap, Nopporn Kichanantha. Jonathan Lurie, Margaret Myers, Kristen Schaefer, Joe Westrate. Warren Zinn. COPY DESK Elizabeth Lucas, Ed STAFF: Matthew Benz, Amy Carey, Jodi Cohen, Lih Kalish, Jill Litwin, Heather Miller, Matt SpewakW ONLINE Scott Wilcox, Editor STAFF: Dennis Fitzgerald. Jeffrey Greenstein, Charles Harrison, Travis Patrick, Victoria Salipande, Matthew Smart. Joe Westrate, Antho y Zak GRAPHICS Melanie Sherman, Editor A 7y . 0('lC' ') } .C ..S S. +! 1., X k. .yi