2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 3, 1997 NATION/WORLD Violent offenses by teens drop WASHINGTON (AP) - Arrests of teen-agers for violent crimes plunged 9 .2 percent last year, and Attorney General Janet Reno said the second straight annual drop was not "a blip" but a real trend away from the juvenile crime wave that rose steadily from 1987 through 1994. At her weekly news conference yes- terday, Reno called on Congress to allo- cate more money for after-school pro- grams "to make it stick." The Republicans who control Congress are writing bills that focus on trying more teen-agers as adults. The drop during 1995 was 2.9 per- cent, and Reno said she had "worried since that it might be a blip. But now ... we are making real progress." The FBI data also showed that arrests of teen-agers for murder dropped 10.7 percent in 1996, the third straight annu- _ al decline after a 169 percent increase between 1984 and 1993, when the juve- nile murder rate peaked. But Reno was not ready to declare victory in her top priority. More than any attorney general since Robert Kennedy, Reno has roamed the nation speaking on youth crime and calling for a balance between tougher penalties for wrongdoers and prevention programs to keep kids out of trouble and help young offenders return to society. She thanked a reporter for noting that just Wednesday a Mississippi high school student was accused of killing three people and that last weekend a 15- year-old allegedly murdered a kid sell- ing candy door-to-door in New Jersey. "We still continue to hear of too many serious violent crimes committed by young people," Reno said. "We can- not be satisfied by this reduction in youth violence.' In 1996, for every 100,000 youths aged 10 to 17, there were 464.7 arrests for violent crimes, down from 511.9 in 1995 and 527.4 in the peak year of 1994, FBI figures showed. This rate had spiraled up from 311.3 arrests in 1987 as drug gangs through- out the country recruited teen-agers as drug couriers and armed them. "Then other kids they hung around with got guns, and then their friends and so on," said Prof. Alfred Blumstein of Carnegie Mellon University. He attributed a major share of the decline in teen-age killing to police efforts to take guns from kids, such as aggressive searches in New York City, a gun bounty in Charleston, S.C., and voluntary gun searches in St. Louis. Reno cited a combination of factors. "The president's crime plan has provided more money and tougher laws,' she said. "And communities across America and their police, their prosecutors, mentors in the communi- ty and young people themselves are working harder than ever to keep' young people on the right track, to give them opportunity and to provide punishment and intervention when they stray." O AROUND THE NATiaN Navy F-14 jet crashes of East Coast VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. - A Navy F-14 Tomcat fighter jet on a routine train- ing flight crashed yesterday in the Atlantic Ocean off the East Coast. The Navy said one crew member was rescued and a search was under way for another. It was the seventh military plane crash since Sept. 13. The six earlier crashes happened within a week and led to a one-day break in training flights for a sa9 review by all the services. The Navy jet went down around 4 p.m., about 65 miles east of Elizabeth City, N.C., said Coast Guard Petty Officer Harry Craft. Craft said a Coast Guard helicopter rescued the plane's radar intercept officer "We have recovered the backseater and he supposedly was in good shape, and we're still on scene now looking for the pilot;" Craft said. The plane was training with another aircraft when it went down, said Mike Maus, a Navy spokesperson. Both crew members ejected from the plane, Maus said. The fighter was assigned to the Oceana Naval Air Station at Virginia Beach. The Navy said three of its ships were within 40 miles of the crash site and, along w aircraft from the Navy and Coast Guard, were participating in the search. Lt. Joe Walker, a Navy Atlantic Fleet air force spokesperson, said the plane belonged to fighter squadron 101 at Oceana. RJIGIOUS SERVICES AVAVAVAVA CANTERBURY HOUSE JAZZ MASS Episcopal Center at U of M 721 E.Huron St. Ann Arbor, MI 48104 (313)665-0606 The Rev.Matthew Lawrence, Chaplain SUNDAYS 5:00 Holy Eucharist with live jazz Steve Rush and Quartex KOREAN CHURCH OF ANN ARBOR 3301 Creek Dr. 971-9777 SUNDA: 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 SUNDA: Worship at 10 a.m. WED.: Evening Prayer- 7 Choir 7:30 IHURS: Issues of Faith Group- 7:00 John Rollefson, Campus Pastor ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH (Anglican Communion) 306 N. Division 663-0518 (2 blocks north and 1 block west of intersection of Huron and State) SUNDA Eucharists- 8am and 10am Adult Education- 9am Call for weekly service times, to get on mailing list, or if you have questions. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL, LCMS 1511 Washtenaw, Near Hill Pastor Ed Krauss, 663-5560 SUNDAY WORSHIP: 10:30 a.m. Dads help children with academics WASHINGTON - It is a formula for school achievement as old as apples for the teacher and as new as home- work done on the Internet: Father's par- ticipation in their children's schools, the Department of Education has found, boosts the children's perfor- mance and wards off misbehavior and academic failure. Children get better marks and are less likely to repeat a grade or be expelled if their fathers are involved in school activities, the study concluded. Among children whose fathers alone were highly involved at their schools, almost half brought home report cards bearing mostly A's. The survey-based report, released at the White House yesterday by Vice President Al Gore, found that fathers' involvement made a substantial differ- ence whether or not the dads lived with their children. In spite of a burgeoning movement among middle-class fathers to involve themselves in their children's lives, more than half of all fathers in two-parent families - and 82 percent of fathers who do not live with their children - have no significant involvement in their children's schools. Court may vote on campaign refom WASHINGTON - Congressional reformers are elated, having finally forced the Senate to start debating their bill to ban political parties from receiv- ing huge donations to tout themselves and their agenda. The measure's backers - Sens. J* McCain, (R-Ariz.), and Russell Y Feingold, (D-Wis.), are continuing efforts to create momentum for their cause. And they hope that when the leg- islative dust settles, they will have made good their pledge to "categorical- ly shut down the Washington 'soft- money' machine," referring to the largely unregulated contributions to the parties that are central to the curr t fund-raising controversies. SAROUND THE WORLI( Timeout' definition causes tension JERUSALEM - Everybody seems to like U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright's idea for a "time- out" in unilateral acts that impede Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. The problem is no one agrees on what it means, particularly when it is applied to the construction of Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank and traditionally Arab East Jerusalem. When Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says "timeout;" he means continuing his policy of building to keep up with "natural growth" in West Bank settlements, while agreeing not to start any new settlements for a period of time. And Jerusalem is not part of the discussion. For the Palestinians, "timeout" means Netanyahu should take a break on all construction on all lands that Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast War. If Albright's recent slip of the tongue calling settlement activity "legal" is any indication, the United States is likely to accept Israel's definition and press the Palestinians to agree in the interest of pursing negotiations for a final peace agreement. The United States' long-standing policy has been to avoid using the term legal or illegal regarding settlements, instead calling them "an obstacle" 'or "counterproductive.' China may not be spreading weapons WASHINGTON - Amid intend lobbying by the U.S. nuclear industry, President Clinton is on the verge of cr- tifying that China does not help spread nuclear weapons to other nations, according to administration officials. That formality would open the way for U.S. companies such as Westinghouse Electric Corp. to sell nuclear power equipment to China. Until now, such sales have been barred by a 1985 law requiring the presiden first certify that China does not eng in the proliferation of nuclear weapons. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. Arthur D. Little is looking for people whof From the crowd. Please send resume and cover letter to: Lisa Gelman Arthur D. Little, Inc. Acorn Park Cambridge, Massachusetts 02140-2390 U.S.A. E-mail: gelman.lisa@adlittle.com 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 are'I $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, yearlong (September through April) is $165. Onrcampus 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 481091327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 764.0552: Circulation 7640558, Classified advertising 7640557; 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/dsity/. EDITORIAL* 11 NEWS Jodi S. Cohen, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jeff Eldridge, Laurie Mayk, Anupama Reddy, Will 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, Eicka M. Smith, Sam Stavis, Heather Wiggin, Kristen Wright, Jennifer Yachnin. CALENDAR: Will Weissert. EDITORIAL Erin Marsh, Ed ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Jack Schillaci, Jason Stoffer. STAFF: Ellen Friedman, Eric Hochstadt, Scott Hunter, Jason Korb, Yuki Kuniyuki, David Lai, Sarah Lockyer, James Miller, Joshua Rich, Megan Schimpf, Paul Serilla, Ron Steiger, Matt Wimsatt, 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 Fnedberg, James Goldstein, Kim Hart, Josh Keirbaum,. Andy Latack, Fred ink, B.J. Luria, Sharat Raju, Pranay Reddy, Tracy Sandler, Richard Shin, Mark Snyder, Nita Srivastava, Dan Stillman, Jacob Wheeler. ARTS Bryan Lark, Jennifer Petilski, Editors WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Kristin Long, Elizabeth Lucas SUB-EDITORS: Aaron Rennie (Music), Christopher Tkaczyk (Campus Arts), Joshua Rich (Film), Jessica Eaton (Books), John Ghose (TV/New Media). STAFF: Colin Bartos, Neal C. Carruth, Anitha Chalam, Emily Lambert, Stephanie Love, James Miller, Anders Smith-Undll, Philip Son, Prashant Tamaskar, Ted Watts, Michael Zilberman. PHOTO Sara Stilman, Ed 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 McKannell, Bryon McLellan, Vishen Mohandas Lakhiani, Emily Nathan, Emily O'Neill, Karen Sachs, Paul Talanian, COPY DESK Rebeca Rerkun, Editor STAFF: Lydia Alspach, Jason Hoyer, Elizabeth Mills, Emily O'Neill, Jon Woodward. ONLINE Adam Pollock, Editor STAFF: Elizabeth Lucas. GRAPHICS STAFF: Alex Hogg, Marcy McCormick, Jordan Young, Jonathan Weitz. 3 3 R clones (need not apply.) Join us for a I lye presentation about superb career opportunities at Arthur D. Littie. Tuesday, October 7th - 7:00 p.m. rl BINES STFFMa. 'Mor uinssMnae ,