2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 23, 1997 NATION/WORLD CLINTON Continued from Page 1. The debate probably will restore bat- tie lines from the vote on the Clinton- backed chemical weapons treaty, rati- fied in April after many lawmakers remained undecided until the last minute. The president needs about 22 Republican senators to join Democrats in support of the treaty. "We intend to win this vote and fail- ure is not an option," said Robert Bell, a senior White House arms control adviser. Sen. Thad Cochran (R-Miss.), chair of the Governmental Affairs subcom- mittee that handles this issue, said his panel will hold a hearing next week on whether the United States can count on its nuclear weapons to work without testing. "If it creates a more dangerous envi- ronment and is an incentive for others to cheat and steal a march on the rest of the world and puts us at risk, then we would make a bad mistake to approve the treaty," he said. During a U.N. visit a year ago, Clinton became the first world leader to approve the historic Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, which prohibits all nuclear test explosions. The United States has not conducted a nuclear test since 1992. The treaty would take effect next September. A Senate vote is expected in the spring. The accord is signed by 146 countries, including Russia and China. India is believed to posses nuclear weapons but is a treaty holdout. Pakistan, another probable nuclear nation, won't endorse it unless India does. Clinton met with Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, but did not mention the treaty and was also meet- ing with Indian Prime Minister I.K. Gujral. Questions about LSA Student Government? Find out how LSA-SG can be a resource for you or your student group. Come to the LSA Student Government mass meeting on Tuesday, September 30 at 5:30 pm in room 2003 LSA Building. Pizza and pop will be served. Topics will include the budget and appointment process. Questions can also be answered at theT tT 0 ttllT LSA-SG office at 4152 Michigan Union or by phone at 647-8636. SPRING BREAK '98 LOWEsT PRICES GUARANTEEDI \ "ANCUNCMAZATE"N FREEHPARTY PAK www.sdntexressa ow SACUA Continued from Page 1 Bryant, while admitting that rela- tions between faculty and the adminis- tration were better than in previous years, said he "thinks it is time that the regents invite a faculty and a student to the board" for a one-to-three-year trial period and then evaluate the effects. Bollinger said he is responsible for keeping the lines of communication open. "I think it's (the president's and the provost's job) to stay alert to the range of the faculty's opinion and alert it to the regents' said Bollinger, adding that additional regents would be more sym- bolic than substantive. D'Alecy said he has been impressed with the president's accessibility to the faculty. "I think he has set a tone," D'Alecy said. "He is delivering. I think you have to respect that." Savic also said that MSA is working with student governments at Michigan State University and Wayne State University in an effort to pass an amendment to the Michigan State Constitution in 1998 to get a student seat on the Board of Regents. SACUA approved a motion to hold a conference with members of the University of California's Board of Regents at their Oct. 13 meeting to get an idea of how having faculty and stu- dents on the board has worked. D'Alecy said that it was not fair to compare what goes on at the University to policies at the University of California. "They have different problems," D'Alecy said. SKATEBOARD Continued from Page 1 physically damage the pavement. The skateboarders' plan divided the group into committees that met at East Quad last week, RC senior Douglas Song said. One committee will handle public relations, possibly by advertising the group's agenda on WCBN radio and cable access television, Song said. Another committee will write and pub- lish a pamphlet on "Skater's Rights,' and a third will manage a petition. There is also a committee to develop a presentation for the city council. Philosophy Prof. Eric Lormand attended the meeting to advise the skaters. "I thought they had a good cause,' Lormand said. "I don't skateboard or anything." Song said that about two-thirds of those attending the meeting were University students. Song said he hopes to work out a compromise with the city on exactly where people can skateboard. "You shouldn't really be able to skateboard on the sidewalk in front of the businesses, but you should be able to skate on the sidewalks around the rest of the town," he said. Paul Friedman, owner of the Treetown skateboard shop, said that if the city and the University deny skate- boarders access to most public places, then the city should be responsible for providing a place open to skateboard- ers. Friedman said that the rationale for their agenda was very simple. "If you take something from skateboarders, you should give them something back," he said. A skate park called Sun and Snow does exist in Ann Arbor, but some skaters said they are frustrated by the place because of safety restrictions. "It's full pads," said Mike Schmidt, a skater and student at Huron High School. "The ramps are bad. It's too overcrowded. It's just not worth it." The skaters said they admit that a decent skate park is a distant goal, largely because of the enormous insur- ance costs necessary in designating the area. Not only are skateboarders often fined, but sometimes their skateboards are confiscated. Some skaters said they blame the policies and local laws rather than the police officers handing out fines and confiscating boards. "It's not really their fault. I mean, they're just doing their job;' skater and former MSU student Brett Bauder said. Blumhardt, who said he has gotten five tickets and had his skateboard con- fiscated twice, said many police offi- cers are sympathetic to the skateboard- ers' cause. He said that several officers admitted willingness to signing peti- tions but said that they "would have to talk to their (commanding officers) before signing anything" out of fear of being reprimanded. The Ann Arbor mobilization was largely inspired by a similar movement that took place in Brighton, Song said. A group of skaters successfully lobbied the city council for a skate park there. They held a fundraising pancake break- AROUND THE NATIQNI7 SaturnT mission spurs plutonium debat No doubt about it, the element plutonium has a bad name. It's the stuff< nuclear bombs. It causes cancer. It's named after the god of hell, Plato: was even given the chemical call letters Pu quite deliberately, "as a joke said its 1941 discoverer, University of California, Berkeley, Nobel laureat Glenn Seaborg. Recently, plutonium has gained new notoriety as NASA prepares to laun th Cassini mission to Saturn, which will carry 72 pounds of plutonium as a pow source. Critics of the mission say that 5 billion people could suffer ill effects Cassini blows up on the launch pad or crashes into Earth during a planned.199 fly-by. Some South Florida residents say 'they are ready to leave town -- or even ti country - before the Oct. 13 launch. And some anti-Cassini activists have threa ened to send boats or parachutes to Cape Canaveral, Fla., in efforts to stop ti launch. Proponents say the risk carried by Cassini is minimal - less than the-no mal background radiation that people receive from natural radioactivity i thl atmosphere, rocks and soil. At worst, 120 people could die over 50 r according to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Fewer back-seat riders buckle up WASHINGTON - Only half the adults who always use a seat belt in the front seat of a car buckle up when they sit in the back seat, a safety group said yesterday. About 77 percent of those surveyed by the Air Bag Safety Coalition said they always wear a seat belt when dri- ving or in the front passenger seat, but only 39 percent always wear it in back. But unbelted back seat passengers are at serious risk of being killed in higher- speed accidents or potentially killing oth- ers as they fly forward, said Janet Dewey, the coalition's executive director. "There's a perception folks don't have to buckle up in the back seat," she said. "The back seat isn't necessarily safer if you don't buckle up." "The tragic death of Princess Diana has put a spotlight on the importance of seat belt use," said Dewey. "The only person who survived that high-speed crash was properly buckled up in the front seat and had the added protection of an air bag." Diana and her companion, Do Fayed, were unbuckled in the bacJ _ser when their car crashed in a Paris tunne Aug. 31, according to French authori ties. Diana, Fayed and their drive Henri Paul, were killed. The only sur vivor, bodyguard Trevor Rees-Jor i recovering in a Paris hospital. 12-year-old babysitter murdere STANWOOD, Wash. - A teen-ag boy who had escaped from a halfWa house was arrested on suspicion o beating a 12-year-old girl to deat while she was baby-sitting five chil' dren at a neighbor's home. "She was like a flower, and it's lik somebody stomped on her," said Sohr Stephen Jones, the girl's father. "Sh didn't deserve to die.' Ashley Jones was attacked latt Saturday, apparently during a burglary said sheriff's spokesperson -. Jar Jorgensen. It was not immediatli known whether she had been sexual] assaulted. The children, ages 2 18 were asleep and not harmed. " AROUND THE WORLD Crippled Mir faces more troubles MOSCOW - Troubles arrived in threes yesterday at the Mir space sta- tion, just three days before the U.S. space shuttle Atlantis is to be launched on a visit to the ailing station. First the Mir's main computer failed for the third time in three weeks. That problem was followed by two new ones: the failure of a carbon dioxide removal system and the appearance of a mysterious leak of brown fluid. Those on the Mir - two Russians and American astronaut Michael Foale - were not in danger, space officials insisted, and, as planned, NASA began its countdown for Thursday's Atlantis launch. "We would strongly dislike it if the shuttle launch is postponed, because it is to bring a new computer and other spare parts" said Viktor Blagov, deputy Russian Mission Control chief. However, the docking will only be possible if the Mir's capricious comput- er functions properly throughout the procedure - which is far from certain. "It functions for one week"*an then it gives us a surprise likeit di this morning," Blagov said -at briefing. Milosevic wins big in Yugoslav voting BELGRADE, Yugoslavia - Unofficial results compiled by-th competing parties showed yesterday that Socialists loyal to Yugoslas President Slobodan Milosevic a radically nationalist party emerged as the big winners in Suny' parliamentary and presidential elec tions in Serbia. But with final and official return, still unavailable, Yugoslavii Milosevic's party seemed in danger o losing its outright majority in the,250 seat parliament. That could forci Milosevic to seek an alliance eithe with Vojislav Seselj, a xenophobic for mer paramilitary leader whose S ar Radical Party appeared to do e than expected. - Compiled from Daily wire reports TIAA-4CREF. Proven Solutions To Last a Lifetime. We take a lot of pride in gaining high marks from the major rating y services. But the fact is, we're equally proud of the ratings we get in the mail every day from our participants. Because at TIAA-CREF, ensuring the finan- cial futures of the education and research community is something T 1nthat goes beyond stars and numbers. So from traditional and variable annuities to life insurance and personal savings plans, you'll find we provide m TA the right choices-and the dedication-to help you achieve a lifetime of financial goals. The rating services back us up. So does Bill. To receive a free Personal Investing Kit, including charges 4. .and expenses, plus our variable annuity prospectuses call us at 1800 226-0147. Please read them carefully before you invest or send money. Or "t" "O d , &P www.tiaa-cref.org A A . The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September. via U.S. mail at $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, yearlong (September through April) is $165. Orcamputisulb scriptions for fal 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 764-%52; Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.etters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://www.pub.umich.edu/dailyl.' NEWS Jodi S. Cohen, Managing Ed EDITORS: Jeff Eldridge.,Laurie Mayk, Anupama ReddyWill Weissert. STAFF: Janet Adamy, David Bricker, Sam England, Megan Exley, Maria Hackett, Heather Kamins, Jeffrey Kosseff, Chris Metinko, Christine M. Paik, Katie Plona, Susan T. Port, Alice Robinson, Ericka M. Smith, Sam Stavis, Heather Wiggin, Kristen Wright. Jennifer Yachnin. CALENDAR: Will Weissert. EDITORIAL Erin Marsh, E ASSOCIATE EDITORS. Jack Schillaci, Jason Stoffer. STAFF: Ellen Friedman, Eric Holdstadt. Scott Hunter Yuki Kuniyuki, David Lai, Sarah Lockyer, James Miller, Joshua Rich, Megan Schinpf, Paul Serilla, Ron Steiger, Jordan Young. SPORTS Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Managing Editor EDITORS: Alan Goldenbach. John Leroi, Jim Rose. Danielle Rumore. STAFF: Nancy Berger, T.J. Berka, Evan Braunstein, Chris Farah, Jordan Field, John Friedberg, James Goldstein, Kim Hart, Josh Keintaum, Andy Latack, Fred Link, 8J. Lua, Sharat Raju, Pranay Reddy, Tracy Sandier, Richard Shin. Mark Snyder, Nita Srivastava, Dan Stillmai Jacob Wheeler. ARTS Bryan Lark, Jennifer Potlnski, Editor WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Kristin Long, Elizabeth Lucas SUB-EDITORS: Aaron Rennie (Music), Chdstopher Tkaczyk (Campus Arts), Julia Shih (Film), Jessica Eaton (Books). John Ghose (TV/New Media). STAFF: Colin Bartos, Neal C. Canuth, Anitha Chalam, Emily Lambert, Stephanie Love, James Miller, Anders Smith-Lindall, Joshua Rich, Philip Son, Prashant Tamaskar. Ted Watts, Michael Zilberman. PHOTO Sara Stillman, E ASSISTANT EDITORS: Margaret Myers, Warren Zinn STAFF: Louis Brown. Seder Bums, Bohdan Damian Cap. Daniel Castle, Mallory S.E. Floyd, John Kraft. Kevin Krupitzer, Kelly McKinneh. Bryan McLellan, Vishen Mohandas Lakhlani, Emily Nathan, Emily O'Neill, Karen Sachs, Paul Talanian. COPY DESK Rebecca Bedrk.n, EdI STAFF: Lydia Alspach, Jason Fayer, Elizabeth Mills. Emily O'Neill, Jen Woodward. ONULINE Adam. Pollock, Edito STAFF: Elizabeth Lucas. GRAPHICS STAFF: Alex Hogg, Marcy McCormick, Jordan Young. Jonathan Weitz. .a . Ao B M -