2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 9, 1997 NATION/WORLD Albright sails through confirmation heanng .... . > ..: , " ... ..:.ti :: . . NMW V . The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Secretary of State-designate Madeleine Albright sailed virtually unchallenged through her confirmation hearing yesterday and appeared assured of prompt approval by a friendly Senate Foreign Relations Committee. From day-old freshmen such as Sen. Gordon Smith (R-Ore.) to Chairman Jesse Helms (R-N.C.), members saluted Albright as a "role model" and champi- on of democracy and welcomed her promise to seek bipartisan consensus on foreign policy. As ambassador to the United Nations, Albright has been a key member of Clinton's foreign policy team. But Helms and other . Republicans mostly addressed her as if she bore no respon- sibility for what they viewed as ill- advised or failed policies, such as the Albright invasion of Haiti. Because of blunders in President Clinton's first term, Helms said, "our adversaries very much doubt our resolve at this moment. So, Madam Ambassador, in your new post a lot of Americans are praying that you will help change that.... It is my hope that as the president's most senior foreign pol- icy official, you will devote your strength and courage to bring some coherence, direction and fresh ideas to America's foreign policy." Helms predicted that "as time goes by we're going to disagree" -- espe- cially over his quest for a total overhaul of the United Nations -- and said ARMORY Continued from Page 1 "We came to the meeting on Monday knowing our proposal wouldn't be accepted by the council," Curtin said. "They won't even listen to us unless they are faced with independent action." Chanting protesters arrived 15 min. utes after the beginning of yesterday's meeting, disrupting the public com- mentary session. Sheldon repeatedly had to demand order. No arrests were made. 812 S. 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For answers to specific questions regarding admission and financial aid, contact one of the directors of graduate studies: Prof. Gregg E. Trahey, Biomedical Engineering, get@egr.duke.edu. Prof. Lo-en W. Nolte, Electrical & Computer Engineering, lwn@ee.duke.edu. Prof. James F. Wilson, Civil & Environmental Engineering, ifw@egr.duke.edu. Prof. Charles M. Harman, Mechanical Engineering & Materials Science, cmh@egr.duke.edu. Albright was "sincerely wrong" in some of her views. But he emphasized his desire to "work together." Committee members spoke admir- ingly of the Czech-born Albright's background as a refugee first from Nazi Germany, then from the Soviet Union, and her ability to speak several foreign languages. Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D- Calif.) expressed gratification that as the first woman named to be secretary of state - and thus the highest ranking woman ever in the executive branch - Albright will be lowering yet another barrier to the advancement of women. U.S. seeks waiver of diplomat's i1mmunity WASHINGTON (AP) - A govern- ment attorney asked yesterday for a waiver of diplomatic immunity so that the United States can prosecute a Republic of Georgia envoy for the death of a 16-year-old girl in a car crash. Based on the prosecutor's request, the State Department will formally ask the Georgian government to waive the diplomatic immunity of the second highest official in its embassy here, department spokesperson Glyn Davies said last night. In requesting the waiver in a letter to the State Department, U.S. Attorney Eric Holder Jr. said evidence points to a high rate of speed and possible alcohol. use in the downtown Washington acci- dent last Friday night. "The U.S. attorney views this as prosecutable," said spokesperson Kevin Ohlson. "We believe there is ample evidence to believe criminal conduct occurred in this case." Davies quoted Holder's letter as saying there is sufficient evidence to seek a grand jury indictment of the diplomat, Gueorgui Makharadze, on charges ranging from negligent homicide to second-degree murder. A car driven by Makharadze was involved in a multi-vehicle crash that killed 16-year-old Jovianne Waltrick of nearby Kensington, Md. The embassy said last night it would have no comment on the prosecutor's request. Attorney Robert Bennett, who represents the Georgian government, didn't immediately return a telephone call seeking comment. Georgia President Eduard Shevardnadze has promised that Makharadze will be held responsi- ble, but he did not specifically say he would agree to waive his diplo- matic immunity to face possible criminal or civil charges. It's highly unusual for governments to waive such immunity, which protects diplomats around the world from prose- cution under possibly unfair laws. At the time of the accident, police indicated that speed and alcohol may have been factors, but said Makharadze was not given breath orj blood-alcohol tests because of his diplomatic status. Skid marks and witness accounts indicated his car had been traveling up to 80 mph, police said. Brokers charged in license cheating NEW YORK - As hundreds of hopefuls filed in to take their stockbro- ker licensing exams, an alert monitor noticed something unusual: the same person was coming in again and again under different names. That tip led to the indictment of 50 stockbrokers on charges they paid $2,000 to $5,000 for two ringers to take the tests for them. The test-takers and a middleman in the alleged scheme also face criminal charges. "Those who cheat their way to their broker's license prove beyond all doubt that they do not deserve the public's trust," Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau said in announcing the charges yesterday. The scandal involves the National Association of Securities Dealers exams covering securities transactions and state regulations given in the New York area from 1993 to 1995. Mary Schapiro, head of the associa- tion's regulation division, said test-tak- ers are now fingerprinted and video- taped to guard against fraud. The indicted brokers all worked at relatively small securities firms. Schapiro said there's no evidence the firms knew the indicted brokers had-not earned their licenses legally. Study finds abortion not linked to cancer WASHINGTON - Women who get an abortion during the first 18 week sof pregnancy do not have an increased risk of getting breast cancer later in life, according to the largest study ever to look at the politically charged question. Several scientists said the new fink ing, published in today's issue of New England Journal of Medicine, should largely settle a scientific and emotional debate that has raged .for years over suggestions that an abortion can lead to breast cancer. "Women can be very assured that the overall risk (of breast cancer) is .not increased," said Mads Melbye, an epi- demiologist who led the study with rol- league Jan Wohlfahrt. .. Gulf syndrome blamed on chemicals WASHINGTON -The elusive "Gulf War Syndrome" was caused by combina- tions of usually harmless chemicals that mingled as they came into contact with U.S. troops during the 1991 Persian Gulf War, according to new research publislTed in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The research, based on examination of 249 Navy construction battalion me bers, suggests that the mysterious complaints grew not from battlefield stress, t were symptoms of physical damage inflicted by exposure to low-level doses of nerve gas, pesticide, anti-nerve-gas medicine and other substances. "Illness from the Gulf War is real," declared Dr. Robert Haley, of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, who was chief investigator in the research. "The syndromes are due to subtle brain, spinal cord and nerve damage - but not stress." The paper was another in a series of studies that have reached sharply different conclusions on a medical mystery that is also a matter of hot political dispute. Veterans groups, some of their allies in Congress and other critics maintain that the Pentagon has responded slowly and half-heartedly to the complaints of thousands of veterans. On Tuesday, a 10-member expert panel convened by the White House issued report faulting the Pentagon's handling of the issue, but finding that nerve gas exposure was not likely to have caused the illnesses now under scrutiny. ~,,t ?$ h "JI LD : ,, . ' . ; ::::;. Yeltsin hospitalied with pneumonia MOSCOW - Russian President Boris Yeltsin fell ill with pneumonia and was hospitalized yesterday in the gravest sign yet that the 65-year-old leader remains in precarious health despite quintuple heart bypass surgery two months ago. The Presidential Press Service issued a terse announcement that Yeltsin's con- dition had worsened from a case of flu reported over the Russian Orthodox Christmas holiday. It said doctors who examined him yesterday evening found evidence of pneumonia and decided to confine him to Central. Clinical Hospital "to clarify the diagnosis and conduct appropriate treatment." Yeltsin returned to the Kremlin only two weeks ago after spending six months in hospitals and rest homes recuperating from a late June heart attack - his third in less than a year - and surgery to restore adequate blood flow to the damaged organ. Officials have sought to play down the seriousness of Yeltsin's condition since he appeared pale and weary in a meeting with visiting German Chancellor Helmut Kohl on Saturday and after he bowed out of a Tuesday government meeting on the pretext having "a heavy cold." Mideast tLkson Hebron stall JERUSALEM - Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, which appeared to be grinding toward an agreement ,on Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank city of Hebron, yesterday took a t for the worse over a larger issue: whT the Israeli army will carry out a promised withdrawal from the rural areas that make up the bulk of the occu- pied territory. In talks with U.S. mediator Dennis Ross that lasted until the early-morning hours, Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat launched into a tirade at Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu because of his proposal that the larger redeploy- ment of Israeli troops from the We Bank be delayed by nearly two years, - Compiled from Daily wire reports. Work faster with it. Power Macintosh' 5260" 100 MHz/16MB RAM/800MB/CD-ROMiot 14" built-in displaykeyboard Now $1,341 Communicate to the world with it. ,..41. ,.. Power Macintosh"*5400 120 MHz/ 6MB RAM/1 6GB/8X COROM 15" built-in dAplay/keybwad " " Now $1, 47 Havefun withit. F ~ Get $150 batck withit Power Macintosif 7200 120 MHz/16MB RAM/12GB/8X CD-ROM 15" diplay/keyboard Now $2,006 Check out Apple's Holiday Savings. Right now Apple Computer is it, offering a $150 rebatewhen you purchase a Macintosh~personal computer and an Annle nrinter. Fact is vour timing couldn't be better to get your Mac" a machine that features some of the 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 arei $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95. yearlong (September through April) is $165. On-campus sutq 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 481091327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 764-0552; Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 7640557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 7640550. - E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu. 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