2 -- The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 10, 1997 NATEONI VORLD Reno 'mad' about fundraising tapes White House delay in disclosing tapes frustrates Reno WASHINGTON (AP) - As Congress pressed its investigation of Democrats, Teamsters and foreign money yesterday, Attorney General Janet Reno flashed uncharacteristic frustration at the White House's delayed disclosure of fund-raising videotapes. "I was mad," Reno said, describing C .her reaction Saturday to word about the tapes' existence. She added that the episode has strained her relationship with the White House, and she volun- teered that her decision against seeking an independent prosecutor to look at Clinton's role in the coffees could still be reversed. But the tapes themselves probably wouldn't have made a difference in that decision, she said. "Where the White House has a respon- sibility to produce documents, it's very. very frustrating when they are produced in a delayed fashion," Reno said at a news conference. "And I also thought we should have been told immediately." At the Capitol, Senate and House committees both continued full-bore in their investigations of Democratic fund- raising practices: At the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee hearing, ques- tioning focused on an alleged scheme -- illegal if true - to swap donations between the Teamsters and the Democratic Party. Former fund-raiser Mark Thomann testified he was asked by his boss, Richard Sullivan, to consider arranging a $100,000 donation from a foreigner to the union but backed away out of concerns about the legality of such a transaction. Thomann disputed the earlier testi- mony of Sullivan, the Democratic Party's former finance director, who had said he did not ask anyone to raise money for the re-election campaign of Teamsters President Ron Carey. Simultaneously, the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee took the first public testi- mony in its late-starting investigation. Witness No. 1, Manlin Foung, sister of Democratic fund-raiser Yah Lin "Charlie" Trie, testified that her brother twice arranged for reimbursements after she and a friend, Joseph Landon, wrote checks for Democratic National Committee functions. For instance, she said she was reim- bursed the same day she wrote a $10,000 check in August 1996 for a Democratic birthday bash for Clinton in New York, which she did not attend. Committee investigators contend this money came from the Bank of China in Macau. "I have no knowledge of laundering," she testified. "To me, I'd simply done my brother a favor. I don't know any- thing. I didn't even know what the DNC JOIN THE MOST PROMISING PROFESSION OF THE 21ST CENTURY Prospective Teacher Education Meeting Thursday, October 16, 1997 6:00 p.m. Schorling Auditorium Room 1309 School of Education Building Call 764-7563 for more information. REJJIGJOU$ SERVEICE 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 SUNDAY: 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 THURS.: Issues of Faith Group- 7:00 John Rollefson, Campus Pastor REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH Wels Lutheran Campus Ministry 1360 Pauline Boulevard Robert Hoepner, Campus Pastor SUNDAY WORSHIP: 10:30 AM Transportation Provided Call: 662-0663 ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH (Anglican Communion) 306 N. Division 663-0518 (2 blocks north and I block west of intersection ?f Huron and State) NDAY: Eucharists- Sam and loam 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. TriC, wk'ho hs 5gone broad, is : hr- mer Little Rock, Ark., restaurateur and longtime friend of Clinton. His sister testified under a grant of immunity fron prosecution based on what she said. The pot was stirred further by Reno, who is rarely so forthcoming at her week- lv meeting with reporters. She has been under daily pressure from Republicans to recommend the appointment of an inde- pendent counsel to investigate the legality of both Clinton and Vice President Al Gore's fund-raising calls. "No one can shout loud enough or write a headline big enough or use words shrill enough to keep me from doing what I think is the right thing on this investigation," she said. Asked if the episode had strained relations with the White House, she said, "Anytime somebody gets upset and mad at what happened, there per- haps is a strain." Italian Fo awarded Nobel Prize STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -- Italy's Dario Fo, whose irreverent plays have made audiences roar with laughter and authorities seethe with anger, won the Nobel Literature Prize yesterday. The 71-year-old Fo, whose work was banned from Italy's state-rut TV and radio for years and who was prosecuted repeatedly for his searing critiques of the government, was a surprise choice, absent from most critics' lists of con- tenders. Fo himself seemed stunned. "I'm amazed," he said on hearing he had won the $1 million prize. "It will pay him back for the many, many humiliations he has suffered in his life," wife and collaborator Franca Rame said. "I believe that today many critics, when they hear this news, will have a heart attack." In honoring Fo, the Swedish Academy called the Italian the modern equivalent of a court jester, citing his "scourging authority and upholding the dignity of the downtrodden." The Vatican's official newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano, was quick to register its disapproval of the acade- my's choice. House OKs school voucher program \\ASlIITI(ON -- In h lxitIs intended as an important test case for schoo vouchers, the Ilouse voted esterday to provide $7 million in federal funds to hel 2,000 District of Columbia families pay tuition at the public or private schools o their choice. By a vote of 203-202 -. an unexpectedly narrow margin -- Republican d ers overcame determined Democratic opposition and a White House veto t a to w in passage of a District of Columbia spending bill that contains the vouche program. The voucher experiment, a key element of the GOP's national education reforn package, would offer poor, inner-city school children "scholarships" of up t S3,200 each to cover tuition costs at nearby parochial, private, or public schools. The surprisingly close vote suggests a difficult journey for the GOP vouche proposal. A conference committee must reconcile the House measure with Senate bill that does not contain a ioucher program. In addition, the White Hous has notified House leaders that senior administration officials will urge Presiden Clinton to veto the bill if it reaches his desk with the voucher proposal. "Establishing a private school voucher system in the nation's capital wouldO dangerous precedent for using federal taxpayer funds for schools that are no accountable to the public;' the White House said in its critique of the House bill. Study: Chance for life on Jupiter moon WASHINGTON -The discovery of organic compounds on two of Jupiter's moons increases the possibility that all of the elements for life are present on another of the planet's moons, Europa. The finding, from instruments on the Galileo spacecraft orbiting Jupiter, sug- gests that Europa may have all three of the ingredients scientists consider essential for life: an energy source, liq- uid water and organic molecules, said planetary scientist Thomas McCord of the University of Hawaii. "This doesn't mean there is life on Europa;" said McCord, lead author of a, study to be published today in the jour- nal Science. "The exciting thing now is the evidence that Europa may have all three of the ingrediants." Europa is already known to have water and internal heat sources. Dale Cruikshank, a research scientist at NASA's Ames Research Center, said the work of McCord and his team should sharpen the research ccncentra- tion on Europa, which already "is th subject of very special interest." "This finding increases the plausibil ity for ,life on Europa,' Cruik~han said. "It also supports the idea tha there were organic molecules strwL ing throughout the solar system:' Gun makers si on to child safety Lock WASH INGTON - Most of the U.S handgun manufacturers agreed yester day to provide child safety locks wit their firearms as part of a pact with th Clinton administration, but the dea does not yet include three Soug California companies that are amon the largest Droducers of cheap hand guns known as Saturday night specials As President Clinton stood in th Rose Garden with leaders of eigh weapon-makers celebrating an agree ment some called historic, Sen Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) was firing of missives to the three companies. whic are among the 10 largest handgun ro ducers in the country. vWS94Y.t".\1\\\W+Y \K0:3i:":i.; :<"}:"i:i"}i:O::S. ..... ... ',y, 1r a AROU14D THE WORLD Hurricane Pauline devastates Acapulco ACAPULCO, Mexico - Hurricane Pauline struck Mexico's most famous tourist resort with devastating fury yes- terday, unleashing deadly torrents that swept people, cars and giant boulders toward storm-ravaged Pacific beaches. At least 11 8 people died along hun- dreds of miles of coast pummeled by Pauline's 100-mph winds - many of those deaths in badly battered Acapulco, a glittering resort of 2.9 mil- lion people that dawned a disaster zone. "This is a very sad day," said Gov. Angel Aguirre of Guerrero state, home to Acapulco, where Pauline sent tor- rents of rainwater raging through streets. Aguirre said at least five other people were killed elsewhere in the state, adding, "We don't recall a hurri- cane ever having caused such damage." In neighboring Oaxaca state, where Pauline first struck with 115-mph winds a day earlier, state government spokesperson Leandro Hernandez con- firmed 14 deaths, 15 people missing and thousands of homeless. "The figure could still rise" saic Hernandez, speaking with Thc Associated Press by telephone from th state, where powerful Pauline ri makeshift homes away and badly- aged such resorts as Puerto Angel. First lady says time to change attitudes PANAMA CITY, Panama -- In region where dictatorships have giver way to democracies, Hillary Rodham Clinton urged nations of the Ame* yesterday to go a step further to protect the rights of women. The only way for democracics tc "survive and thrive," she said, is'.q give women more power "to seek and claim their rights as citizens and ashumar beings." Speaking at a conference ofLatir American first ladies, Mrs. :Chintor suggested the challenge could be more difficult than the giant undertakin 1 building the Panama Canal, wlW Pacific entrance was just blocks away. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. Your sneakers would have no sole a - / 4 -a; '- P b s .~ 4 . ..* -4--b .y Y. ^v Your tape player would have no rhythm Your jeans would not be blue The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Froay during the fall and winter terms b students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, star ting in September. via U.S. mail a $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95. yearlong (September through April) is $165. Oncampus. 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. 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