- The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 27, 1998 Federal charges sought in shootings AROUND THE NATION the Washington Post WASHINGTON - Justice Department officials ire scouring the U.S. criminal code to determine whether the two boys arrested in the Jonesboro ;chool shooting might serve longer sentences if 'hey are tried under some sort of federal law. Mitchell Johnson, 13, and Andrew Golden, 11, ire too young under Arkansas law to be tried as idults and thus face lengthy prison terms. The )oys are being held on murder charges in the ,hooting of middle-school teacher and four stu- dents Tuesday. Under the state's juvenile justice system, even if convicted of murder, they are likely to be set free when they turn 18. "What we're doing is going through all the various federal statutes to see what might be effective," Attorney General Janet Reno said yesterday at her weekly news conference. "At this point, with respect to both, they could be charged under certain federal crimes as juveniles. The question remains about how long the jurisdiction might be continued and whether they could be charged as adults," Reno said. w - ATTENTION In most states, juveniles are often not sentenced to a specific term but instead put under the juris- diction of a court or a social service agency until they reach a certain age or are declared rehabili- tated. Reno said Justice Department officials are work- ing with Paula Casey, the U.S. Attorney in Little Rock, and local prosecutors are trying to determine whether prosecuting the boys as juveniles under federal law would allow the boys to be jailed until they are 21 years old, the maximum age that juve- niles can be held. HIS!HOLOCAUST Continued from Page 1. student Julie Mayfield, one ofthe readers from the Alpha Phi sorority. The warm, sunny weather brought many people to the Diag yesterday. Some of the people passing by offered a few minutes of their time to read some of the names. "The Holocaust is very real to me," said LSA senior Adam Schlifke. "My ~ grandparents are both survivors. I like to go to any Holocaust-related event that I can." The planning committee worked with Hillel and raised funds for the event through various sponsors and donations. The list of names was compiled by the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Israel, Yad Vashem. Billing records surface in Foster's attic WASHINGTON - In a bizarre discovery in the late Vincent Foster's att Whitewater prosecutors have landed a second set of Hillary Rodham Clintoi once-elusive law firm billing records, lawyers said yesterday. The records have fewer handwritten notations and fewer pages but genera contain the same information as the set belatedly found in the White House 1996, the lawyers said. Nonetheless, the documents have become a fresh line of inquiry for grand questioning in Arkansas, where prosecutors are pressing to wrap up their inves gation of the first lady's legal work for a failed savings and loan owned by 1 Whitewater business partner. "You're sitting in the grand jury and the prosecutors read you an entry abc Mrs. Clinton from one set of billing records, question you about it, then they pi up the other set and read other entries about other meetings," said one recent gra jury witness who spoke only on condition of anonymity. Prosecutors are trying to determine if Clinton, while a private Arkansas attorni assisted a series of fraudulent S&L land transactions in the mid-1980s carried c by her business partner, the late James McDougal. They're also investigati whether she lied about her work under oath or tried to conceal documents i Whitewater investigation that began during her husband's presidency. 40001'r SENIOR HISTORY CONCENTRATORS Colloquium sign-up for tall term 1998 is MONDAY, MARCH 30, 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. in 1 024i Tisch Hall. New policy to alter transplant protocol WASHINGTON - The Clinton administration yesterday announced a far-reaching new policy on organ trans- plantation, aiming to ensure that organs go to the sickest patients first, regardless of where they live. The current system, a patchwork of regional plans, more often than not favors patients by geography rather than medical necessity, said officials from the Department of Health and Human Services. "This is about living or dying," Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala told reporters at a brief- ing. "This is about where you happen to live affecting whether you live or die. People are dying unnecessarily - not because they don't have health insur- ance, not because they don't have access to care, but because of where they happen to live. We need a level playing field for all patients." While the medical technology and survival rates of organ transplantation byears, the need for organs has persiste ly far exceeded the supply available I donation. It is estimated that 10 people eve day die in the United States while wa ing for a donated kidney, liver, hea lung or other organ. 4 Famed Intel CEO Grove to step dowr SAN FRANCISCO--At the heart the computer is a single silicon chip, t microprocessor. And at the heart Silicon Valley is the man who made t lion's share of those chips, Intel Col chief executive Andy Grove. Now that's changing. G announced yesterday that he is turnii over the daily reins of the company helped create to Craig Barrett. Gre will remain as Intel's chair. "This organization is fine-tuned 4 build computer chips) better than anyo else;' Grove said yesterday. "And we' done that without short cuts or compi mises in values and operating style." Fnday, March 27 Kuenzet Room, Michigan Union Brian Lamb Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, C-SPAN Reception follows KEYNOTE 4-5:30 pm 8:30-9 am PANEL ONE 9-11 am PANEL TWO 11 am-1 pm PANEL THREE 2:30-4 pm Saturday, March 28 Anderson Room C&D, Michigan Union REGISTRATION & COFFEE Challenges to Industry Leo Hindery President, Tele-Communications Inc. and Chief Executive Officer, InterMedia Partners Eli Noam Director, Columbia Institute for Tele-Information, Columbia University James Quello Former Commissioner, Federal Communications Commission Transformations of Audience Henry Jenkins Director, Comparative Media Studies Program, MIT W. Russell Neuman Director, Program on Information and Society, University of Pennsylvania Robert Kraut Professor of Social Psychology and Human-Computer Interaction, Carnegie-Mellon University Possibilities for Community. Phil Agre Associate Professor, UC-San Diego Lee Sproull Professor, Management Information Systems, Boston University Wanda Orlikowski Associate Professor of Information Technologies and Organization Studies, MIT RELIGIOUS SERVICES AVAVAVAVA CANTERBURY HOUSE Episcopal (Anglican) Center 721 E. Huron St. (Behind Frieze Bild.) SUNDAY JAZZ MASS 5:00PM W/ QUARTEX Supper follows service Retreats, Bible study, Service Opportunities - Call 665-0606 The Rev Matthew Lawrence, Chaplain 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 SUN2AY: Worship at 10a.m. THURS.: Faith and Fiction 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) SUNDAY Eucharists-8am 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. Wed. LENT Vespers, 7 p.m. AROUND THE WORLD Visit to South Africa a presidential first CAPE TOWN, South Africa - Hailing South Africa's triumph over apartheid as an "affirmation of humanity at its best;' President Clinton yesterday became the first American president to set foot in this nation that until four years ago was an international pariah. Escorted into the chamber of South Africa's Parliament Building yesterday afternoon by President Nelson Mandela, who through decades of protest and imprisonment rallied the world against his country's state-sanc- tioned racism, Clinton told the National Assembly that South Africa had trans- formed itself from a source of outrage into a source of inspiration. "Now the courage and the imagina- tion that created the new South Africa and the principles that guide your con- stitution inspire all of us to be animat- ed by the belief that one day humanity all over the world can at last be released from the bonds of hatred and bigotry, Clinton said. Clinton, halfway through a six-nati Africa tour, is being accompanied South Africa by an unusually large U delegation--a heavily African Americ assemblage of some 50 politicians, ness executives and civil rights act who arrived here yesterday on an a Force jet and will accompany the pre dent in Cape Town and Johannesburg. Yugoslavs adding t( Kosovo police force PRISTINA, Yugoslavia - Ignori U.S. warnings, the governmer Yugoslav President Slobod Milosevic has deployed several hu dred additional police to the rebellic Kosovo province in what may sigr the start of another offensive, Weste officials said yesterday. The United States and its Europe allies have demanded that Milosei withdraw special police forces from t Albanian-majority province in southe Serbia. - Complled from Daily wire repor I MI II 03 1- rrnin The Michigan Daily (lSSN 0745487) 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 sut 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. 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