2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 20, 1997 NATION/WORLD Clinton picks CIA insider to head agency A CIA Deputy Director George Tenet chosen to lead agency The Washington Post ..WASHINGTON - President Clinton yesterday named George Tenet, who has been deputy CIA director since 1995$, as his choice to head the spy agency and predicted he would win easy Senate confirmation. ., Tenet, a 44-year-old former White .House and congressional staff member, .has, been running the CIA as acting director for -the past three months. Clinton said Tenet's experience on Capitol Hill will help him garner enough bipartisan support to avoid the bitter confirmation battle that sank for- mer national security adviser Anthony Lake's nomination for the top CIA job earlier this week. Hours before departing for Helsinki for a summit with Russian President Boris Yeltsin, Clinton said he thought it was important to name his replacement -."of for Lake with dispatch. "I believe that we should not leave these positions vacant long, particularly in the national security area, but throughout the government," Clinton said, adding, "I didn't see any point in waiting around." Tenet will be confirmed, Clinton told reporters, "because he's well known to the Senate and well respected by Republicans as well as Democrats." Although Tenet doesn't have the top- level national security experience of most previous CIA directors, his favor- able confirmation prospects were the decisive factor behind his nomination, according to administration officials. They said he emerged as front-runner almost immediately from a small list of contenders at the start of the week. Even before he was named, Tenet received praise from Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Chair Richard Shelb (R-Ala.), who set many of the hurdles that ultimately tripped up Lake. Once Clinton made it official, Shelby issued a statement saying he had known Tenet for "several years" and consid- ered him a "man of integrity and pro- fessionalism." But White House officials are not taking confirmation for granted. Tenet, they said, huddled at the White House for several hours yesterday in the office of Deputy Chief of Staff John x P o d e s t a . Administration officials tried to anticipate all man- ner of questions Tenet that might arise, and crafted with Tenet what his responses would be. Tenet, standing by Clinton and Vice President Gore, called his nomination "a bittersweet moment" because he had been looking forward to serving as deputy to "my good friend Tony Lake." He said he had "always believed there is no room for partisanship in the conduct of our intelligence community," and that "we must always be straight and tell you the facts as we know them." One serious question about Tenet, according to CIA sources, is whether he will be able to deal with Defense Secretary William Cohen and Secretary of State MadelaineAlbright as an equal. "Remember, he was a staffer on the intelligence committee, working for Cohen who was a senator and a ranking member" said one intelligence source. "He's now going to play with the heavy hitters and there is a fear that more intelligence activities will migrate to the Defense Department,"he added. One leveler may be that Tenet will have Cabinet rank, according to White House officials. Only Deutch and the late William Casey sought and were given that rank while CIA director. The job Tenet was nominated to has three separate components. There is the best-known role as director of CIA, the country's prime spy agency, but he also would be the president's chief adviser on intelligence matters. SAROUfND THE rw.NiATI . Senate aproves finance investigtion WASHINGTON - The Senate yesterday brushed aside Democratic objections and approved a Republican resolution seeking an independ4n(t counsel to investigate allegations of illegal fund-raising in the 1996 prey dential election. The non-binding resolution, approved on a party-line vote of 55 to 44, calls on Attorney General Janet Reno to ask a federal court to appoint an outside prosecu- tor because of what it described as strong evidence of possible official wrongdor ing on behalf of President Clinton's re-election. Democrats complained that the Senate should not be telling Reno what to doand that Congress should also be investigated if an independent counsel is appointed. They proposed a resolution of their own to that effect but it was rejected, 58 to 41. Three Democrats who have urged appointment of an outside counsel - Sens: Russell Feingold (Wis.), Daniel Patrick Moynihan (N.Y.) and Paul Wellstone (Minn.) - voted against both resolutions. "The attorney general should appoint an independent counsel to investig* alleged improprieties by Democrats and Republicans" in presidential and congres- sional campaigns, Moynihan said. It is the only way to conduct a probe withoig "dissolving into partisan bias" and the "appearance of a conflict of interest" he added. U U "4 PRESENT The University of Michigan Program for the Study of Complex Systems Third Annual Interdisciplinary Symposium on Complex Systems Artist Willem de Kooning dead at 92 EAST HAMPTON, N.Y. - Willem de Kooning, whose swirls and slashes of color helped define abstract expres- sionism and made him one of the 20th century's greatest painters, died in his studio yesterday. He was 92. De Kooning's abstract expressionist works included traces of the earlier sur- realist movement and prefigured Pop art. Along with Jackson Pollock, he led the group of artists who helped New York replace Paris as the center of the art world in the years after World War 11. "I don't paint to live, I live to paint,' he said in his 80s. "It's a nice thing to look forward to." De Kooning painted daily until the late 1980s, even after being diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. In 1989, after a bitter court fight, he was declared mentally incompetent and control of his estate was given to his attorney and his daughter, Lisa, who is his only survivor. De Kooning's death came just two months after New York's Museum of Modern Art opened an exhibit of his late paintings, titled "Objects of Desire." Among his meticulously composed canvases was his 1944 "Pink Lady," which brought $3.63 million at aucti@ in 1987. Researchers follow up on Martian life Seven months after the startling report that traces of primitive ancient Martian life may have been detected in a meteorite from Mars, scientists met in Houston this week to discuss 34 new scientific papers of follow-up researe on the topic.=V "We feel that the evidence of past biogenic activity (in the rock) is much stronger now than when we wrote the paper," said Everett Gibson of the. NASA team that made the claim. "There are no show stoppers. We believe the criticism that has been lev- eled at us can be answered. ..: This;is science in action." Gibson said about a third of the n papers raise questions that his team feel compelled to deal with. March 20, 1997 Rackham Amphitheatre 1:00 - 6:00 pm Opening Remarks Robert Savit, Director Program for the Study of Complex Systems 1:00 pm 2:15 pm 3:30 pm 4:00 pm 5:15 pm 6:00 pm Rules for the Evolution of a Genetic Switch Michael Savageau, The University of Michigan The Simplistic Roots of Complexity Harold Morowitz, Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study George Mason University BREAK Natural Selection and Complex Systems David Sloan Wilson, Binghamton University Panel Discussion on group selection and its implications. Panelists from UM include John Holland, Professor of Psychology & EECS, Randolph Nesse, Professor of Psychiatry, and others. Reception - Assembly Hall f.. AROND HE <. INF LI-E 764 The Symposium is free and registration is not required. Inquiries can be directed to Katherine Richards at 763-3301 or kjrich@umich.edu a i i i p ,, . F : n d F b'.. Worldwide TB cases leveling off A strict but inexpensive tuberculosis control program has caused the world- wide TB epidemic to level off for the first time in years at an estimated 16 million to 20 million active cases, the World Health Organization reported yesterday. Global implementation of the strate- gy, called "directly observed treatment short-course" (DOTS), could prevent as many as 10 million deaths world- wide during the next 10 years, the WHO projected in a new report. DOTS, in which health workers ensure that patients take all their medi- cine for a full six-month course of treatment, "produces cure rates as high as 95 percent, even in the poorest of countries," the report said. The approach eventually could "cut in half" the global trend of the disease, which results in 6 million to 8 million new cases annually, the WHO said. Prior to 1996, incidence had been rising by more than l million cases a year, and WHO had predicted an annual incre of 10.2 million cases by 2000. Three-fourths of the world's Ta cases are in 13 countries, includia China, India, Bangladesh, Brazil, Indonesia, Mexico and Zaire. Conditions are particularly severein Pakistan, Ethiopia, Thailand, the Philippines, South Africa and Russia. Albanian officials try to get aid TIRANA, Albania - Looted wat houses and empty prisons left offi- cials struggling yesterday to find a way to'get humanitarian aid past the armed gangs terrorizing much , of Albania, while southern rebels ruled out using force for the first time in their bid to oust President Sali Berisha. At least three more people were killed yesterday in the southern Oty' of Korca, which has been caug' between rival organized-crin gangs. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. WHA T ANN ARBOR WILL BE WEARING THIS SRIG!!! ON MARCH22, 1997AT6PM S.IS.T.E. R. STUDENTS IN STOCKWELL TRANSMITTING ETHNIC RELATIONS k TOGETHER WITH MICHIGAN BOOK & SUPPLY ARE BRINGING THE ESSENCE OF STYLE TO STOCK WELL HALL 'S BLULE CARPET LOUNGE 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. 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 St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 76440552; Circulation 764-0558: classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://www.pub.umich.edu/daity/ EDTRA ST.F Jsh hit,*EitorinCif NEWS Jodi S. Cohen, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jeff Eldridge, Laurie Mayk. Anupama Reddy, Will Weissert. STAFF: Janet Adamy, Brian Campbell, Greg Cox, Jeff Enderton. Sam England. Megan Exley, Maria Hackett. Heather Kamins. Kerry Kais, Amy Klein, Jeffrey Kosseff. Marc Ughtdale. Carrie Luria, Chris Metinko, Tim O'Connell, Katie Plona, Susan T. Port, Alice Robinson. Ericka M. Smith, Ann Stewart, Ajit K. Thavarajah. Michelle Lee Thompson, Katie Wang, Jenni Yachnin. EDITORIAL in Marsh, EdKE ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Paul Serilla. EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Jason Stoffer. STAFF: Emily Achenbaum, Kristin Arola, Ellen Friedman, Samuel Goodstein, Heather Gordon, Scott Hunter, Yuki Kuniyuki, Jim Lasser. Sarah Lockyer, James Miller, Partha Mukhopadhyay, Zachary M. Raimi, Jack Schillaci, Megan Schimpf, Ron Steiger. SPORTS Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Managing Edto EDITORS: Alan Goldenbach. 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