onight: More snow, low round 250. omorrow: Windy with more now, high 300. 'trail Irnt One hundred six years ofeditorliafreedom Wednesday January 15, 1997 *l , . ccords ' etanyahu, Arafai TWashington Post RUSALEM - After prolonged and painful labor, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat completed a long- awaited accord early this morning to pull back Israeli forces from the city of Hebron and the rural West Bank. Initialed about 2 a.m. Jerusalem time at a stark con- crete border post, the agreement was a historic turning point in Israeli politics and in the tortuous efforts of Israelis and Palestinians to reach territorial compro- mise. The unlikely partners, distrustful to the end and a npanied by U.S. special envoy Dennis Ross, e ged and shook hands coolly after more than two hours of talks. "Both sides took each other's needs into account," Ross said to waiting reporters, by way of explanation, in a brief statement just before 3 a.m. Although not much more in substance than a revised commitment to pacts reached long before, the deal was the first for Netanyahu and his governing step closer' to peace t agree to Israeli troop withdrawls Likud party with the Palestinians and a painful depar- ture from Likud's bedrock ideals. Netanyahu committed his government to transfer land and limited governing power to Arafat - four- fifths of Hebron immediately, and substantial chunks of the rural West Bank by the middle of next year. Arafat, for his part, renewed unkept promises to extra- dite suspects wanted by Israel on criminal charges and to rewrite the Palestinian Covenant to expunge calls for Israel's destruction. After reaching their accord this morning, the two men passed cellular phones back and forth while plac- ing joint telephone calls to President Clinton, Jordan's King Hussein and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak - awakening the Egyptian leader with news of their success. In Washington, Clinton told a White House briefing that the Hebron accord "brings us another step closer to a lasting, secure Middle East peace. Once again the Israelis and the Palestinians have shown they can resolve their differences.... Once again the forces of peace have prevailed over a history of division." Clinton called the agreement "a good omen," but cautioned that much remains to be done. "This is not a time to relax," he said. "It is a time to reinforce our commitment to peace." Both leaders are expected to submit the accord to their cabinets today, and an Israeli parliamentary vote should come this week. By last night, anticipation of the pact had opened cleavages in Netanyahu's governing coalition and political base. Although a bare majority in Netanyahu's cabinet seemed likely to back him, the result remained uncertain. The accord calls for Israeli troops to depart most of Hebron within 10 days, finally completing a withdraw- al from the West Bank's six largest towns that was begun in 1995. But Israel's army is skittish about a pro- longed twilight period there, and senior officers - See MIDEAST, Page 2 Magazine off fromI BtIice Robinson Daily Staff Reporter A whimsical idea three girls in Bursley Residence Hall had a few years ago has turned into much more. Sitting together six years ago, then- Art sophomores Tali and Ophira Edut and then-LSA first-year student Dyann Logwood were talking about women's issues when one had the idea of starting a magazine for teen- and college-aged L that would re-enforce women's sew-esteem, not diminish it. "We said we wanted to create a mag- azine and then (Tali and Ophira) were like, 'Why don't we do it?"' said Logwood, a co-publisher of HUES (Hear Us Emerging ng Sisters), who is currently pursu- It's eV ing a second b elor's degree that other at the University. She received a magazine: communication ha degree from the $ University in 1995Co-publisher o Since then, thousands of women have seen seven issues of HUES, where diversity is celebrated and anorexic-looking 4els are nowhere to be seen. It is sold in all 50 states and several foreign countries, including Singapore and Malaysia. An eighth issue is due out next month. HUES is not the place to find "self- help" articles such as "How to Drop Those Pounds" and "How to Get Him to Notice You," said LSA junior Emily Husband, HUES copy editor. "It's not s uch a magazine that's really con- State law leaves bars, stores Almost dry By Jeffrey Kosseff Daily Staff Reporter Bar-hopping students may be disap- pointed if Gov. John Engler and the State Court of Appeals do not come to are ement soon. st month, Engler ordered the abol- ishment of the Liquor Control Commission, the state-run alcohol dis- tributor, and planned to switch alcohol distribution to private companies. On Friday, two days before the pri- vate distributors were scheduled to .. . _ AP PHOTO Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, shakes hands with Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat, right, at a meeting at Erez crossing between Israel and the Gaza Strip yesterday. 'U' study shows national nse in teen drug use takes A2 start cerned with fashion and meeting boys;' she said. Instead, features such as "Can I Love My Body?," a criticism of fad diets and plastic-looking models; "Single Working Moms," a photoessay illustrat- ing the daily lives of moms on their own; and "Sister Circle" a round-table discussion of issues concerning black women, occupy the pages of HUES. With each issue, HUES emphasizes a concept that may seem foreign to many other women's magazines: Why can't women and girls be taught to like them- selves? "It's everything that other women's magazines don't have," said co-publish- er Ophira Edut. Husband erythingsaid HUES is success- r women'S ful at reach- ing out to s don't w o m e n. r f 1+ Largest increase seen in 10th graders' marijuana use By Jeffrey Kosseff Daily Staff Reporter A study by three University professors found that drug use in teen-agers nation- wide is steadily increasing. The largest increase found in the Monitoring the Future study is in the use of marijuana by 10th graders, a number that doubled in one year to 34 percent. But Lloyd Johnston, who conducted the study with Patrick O'Malley and Jerald Bachman, said marijuana is not the only drug increasing in use among teen-agers. "We certainly have been seeing an increase in a wide range of drugs," Johnston said. LSD usage rose to 9 percent among high school seniors, and the use of ice, a form of crystal methamphetamine, dou- bled since 1992 to 2.8 percent among 12th graders. The marijuana statistics show the most noticeable increases, but it remains unknown whether marijuana necessarily leads to other illicit drug use. Johnston said that although "almost everyone who uses any other drugs first uses marijuana' there is not sufficient evidence to show marijuana is a gateway drug. Johnston's colleagues said they agree. "Most people who use cocaine also drank milk as a child," said David Carter, professor of criminal justice at Michigan State University who has studied the field of teen drug use. "There is correla- tion, but there are too many factors to definitely say it's causal." The results of the survey were released last month at a forum with Secretary of Health and Human Services Donna Shalala and national Drug Czar Gen. Barry McCaffrey. Some disagree with the focus group of the study. "The adult drug problem dwarfs the teen figures," said Mike Males, author of the book "Scapegoat Generation," an argument against studies that focus on teens. Males said the federal government, which sponsored the Monitoring the Future study, uses such studies to blame teen-agers when adult drug and alcohol use is actually a larger problem. "It's a crock. ... We have the worst drug abuse crisis in the country after 10 years of the failed wars on drug use," Males said. "We have this mushrooming problem of 15 million binge-drinking adults that affects children at home. Kids are being raised in increasingly violent homes." However, Carter said Johnston's study is very accurate, and the information is correct. "Given all of the related studies I have seen, it is a good, consistent study" Carter said. Johnston said he does not support campaigns such as the "Just Say No" campaign in the '80s because "slogans don't generally work.' He said educa- tional programs such as Project Star, which uses role-playing, are more effective. "One of the unintended conse- quences of the role-playing is students see their friends don't want to use drugs as much as they thought" Johnston said. - Ophria Edut f HUES magazine "The maga- zine is so important. I think it gives stu- dents a good maga- zine of self-worth and self-esteem. I really agree with their outlook," Husband said. The magazine's founders said they have received a number of grateful let- ters from readers, often thanking them for showing women of different ethnic- ities in the magazine. Others have said, "Thank you for not telling me I was fat, unattractive and simple," Tali Edut said. But not everyone finds the maga- zine's message appealing. Tali Edut said the magazine has had trouble getting JULLY PARK/Daily Ophira Edut, Art alum; Dyann Logwood, communication alum/women's studies major; and Tall Edut, Art alum, are the editors of HUES, a nationally known femi- nist magazine. '_ corporations to buy advertising and convincing chain drugstores to carry the publication. Many of these corporations are led by men who feel the magazine is too radical to support, Tali Edut said. "I think that what they're afraid of (is) a magazine that doesn't tell women to hate themselves," Edut said. "We found out that it's really not that easy at all to get national advertising." Edut said she would not describe the magazine as "radical." "I personally don't consider HUES to be radical at all," she said. "It's written See HUES, Page 2 Services scheduled for prof. killed in Comair plane crash By Janet Adamy Daily Staff Reporter Students and faculty will celebrate the life of Prof. Betty Jean Jones next week during a memorial service incor- porating elements of her passion and personality. Jones, who was both a Rackham associate dean and a professor in the theatre department, was killed in the crash of Comair Flight 3272 last Thursday. The memorial, titled "A Celebration of the Life of Betty Jean Jones (in Two Acts)'" will begin with a formal service Jan. 23 at the Rackham Ampitheatre, immediately followed by a celebration in the Trueblood Theatre, located in the Frieze Building. Plane got new engine 5 days before crash DETROIT (AP) - The right engine of the Comair twin-engine turboprop that crashed during a snowstorm on the way to Detroit had been replaced five days earlier in regularly scheduled main- tenance, the company said yesterday. Asked whether the company believes that was a factor in the crash, Comair Inc. spokesperson Meghan Glynn said: "No. But I can't comment further.' All 29 people on board Comair flight Theatre where she did her play," Kerschbaum said. WARREN ZINN/Daily ! CA ..eet... - nr i..LL. nnesa ninharen# hor5vatar iv eThurIIhdAUwn 1afe I