2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 10, 1998 NATION/X ORLD Yeltsin struggles to stabilize Russia MOSCOW (AP) - Russia spent another day without a fully functioning government yesterday, its economy unraveling while President Boris Yeltsin pondered the next move in his political chess game with parliament. Yeltsin apparently was considering alternatives to acting Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin, includ- ing a Communist whose nomination undoubtedly would sail through the leftist-dominated parliament. But there were signs that Yeltsin might insist on Chernomyrdin after all. The political stalemate is exacerbating Russia's eco- nomic collapse, which was reflected yesterday by ris- ing prices and a spread of emergency measures, such as price controls, in some regions of the country. Surprisingly, however, the country's tattered curren- cy, the ruble, bounced back a bit. Rubles, which were selling at about 20 to the U.S. dollar Tuesday, rose in street sales to as strong as 10 to the dollar, although rates varied widely. The official rate was 15.77 rubles to the dollar. Foreign currency dealers said the improved rate suggested that people had exhausted their ruble supply in panic buying and had begun to exchange more of their dollar savings for rubles. Many Russians keep their savings in U.S. dollars. The lack of rubles sent the currency's value up. "I've been trying in the last few days to buy more," said 25-year-old Dmitry, a police officer who would- n't give his last name. "But I can't change my money at a bank because there aren't any rubles." Stores in Moscow were restocking shelves and peo- ple seemed less worried about food shortages. "I'm buying but I haven't been in panic," said Tatyana Shishkova, a retired teacher. "We see people hoarding, but we don't do it. There's no reason for it. You can't buy for your entire life." Yeltsin spent the day at his country house outside Moscow, meeting with top aides and deciding if he would agree to a compromise candidate for prime minister. There was speculation in the Duma, the lower chamber of parliament, that Yeltsin was considering Yuri Maslyukov, a Soviet-era economic official and a member of the Communist Party.M aslyukov has worked with Yeltsin before, resigning last week as trade and industry minister. Communist and centrist leaders praised Maslyukov, saying they would back him for prime minister. Maslyukov met yesterday with Yeltsin's chief of staff, Valentin Yumashev, but there were no details on what they discussed, the ITAR-Tass news agency reported. Maslyukov's spokesperson said he hadn't been offered any government post yet, according to Interfax. Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov, whose name has been mentioned prominently as a potential prime min- ister, met with Chernomyrdin and Yeltsin's chief of staff, and predicted afterward that Chernomyrdin would be nominated a third time, ITAR-Tass reported. The Duma twice has rejected Chernomyrdin's nom- ination as prime minister. If it rejects Yeltsin's nominee a third time, Yeltsin would be forced by law to dissolve parliament and call new elections. Method to select baby's sex successful FAIRFAX. Va. - Fertility researchers say they are successftlly helping prospec- tive parents fulfill their dreams in selecting whether to have a baby Michelle or a baby Michael. The technique involves identifying and separating sperm cells that carry the Y chromosome, which produces males, from those that carry the X chromosorn which produces females without the presence of t Y chromosone. W Dr. Edward Fugger of the Genetics & IVF Institute said today that sperm cells can be segregated by the amount of DNA they contain before being used to fertil- ize an egg through artificial insemination. The institute's research is published in the September edition of the journal Human Reproduction. TheY-chromosome sperm has about 2.8 percent less genetic material than sperm with the X chromosome. Researchers were able to sift sperm to produce samples in which 85 percent of the cells had an X chromosome. If they targeted Y-bearing sperm, the result was a sperm sample in which 65 percent of the cells contained a Y chromosome, The New York Times reported yesterday. The institute said 29 women who wanted to have girls became pregnant. So far, ni of those women have given birth to I healthy baby girls. including two sets of twins. P 1 Presentation PsP career opportunitie's J.P. Morgan is a leading global financial firm that provides strategic advice, raises capital, trades financial instruments, and manages assets for corporations, governments, financial institutions, and private clients. Please plan to attend our information presentation for undergraduate students from University of Michigan Business, Engineering, and Liberal Arts schools who are interested in Internal Consulting Services Tuesday, September 15 6:30 - 8:30 pm Michigan Union, Pendleton Room All majors welcome JPMorgan www.jpmorgan.com J.P. Morgan is an equal opportunity employer. B00K Continued from Page1A tist at Harvard's John F. Kennedy school of government. Because the book, "The Shape of the River," was just being released, no one was avail- able who could comment critically on its methods or conclusions. The book had more information on black students than on other minorities because fewer data were available on the others. -m- - --- -- - -rn-rn,- I I CLIP THIS COUPON AND SAVE * Redeemable only at1 1 LABOR OF LoVE CHURCH 1 OUR 30-DAY GUARANTEE1 * Try us out for 34Odays. I If you're not totally satisfied I I with our Sunday services, I 1 you don't have to come back. I 1LABOR OF *LOVE 1 CHURCH Dr. Charles E. Hawthorne, Pastor 1 I 1 3350 Textile Road, Pittsfield Township 1 1 The dome church just off Mich. Ave. I 1 between US-23 and Platt 1 Air Evangelistic, Edifying, Equipping Church 1 I I 1 Sunday School - 9:00 am. 1 1 Sund ayService- 11:00 ai.m. For more info, give us a call at 1 (734) 528-DOME (3663) 1 " A church that offers no empty promises." , Illegal alien numbers growing in prisons KEY WEST, Fla.- INS detainees represent the fastest-growing seg- ment of the nation's jail population. While the increase in federal and state inmates slowed in 1997 - to 5.2 percent from a decade average of 7 percent - the number in INS cus- tody soared by 42 percent over the previous year. The Clinton administration is push- ing for congressional extension of a policy that has given local INS direc- tors some flexibility to release nonvio- lent offenders marked for deportation. Without that discretionary authority, due to expire next month, INS officials say the detained population could quickly double. "There's no possible way we can detain all of these people -nor should we," INS Commissioner Doris Meissner said recently. The looming crisis has INS officials scrambling. The $700 million now bud- geted annually for detention and depor- tation soon will have to be doubled if the population continues to grow at current rates, officials say. To help alleviate the pressure, the INS is trying to convince the U.S. Bureau of Prisons to take custody of its "lifer" detainees, now numberO about 2,800. Unstable market touches benefit plan WASHINGTON - Wall Street's roller coaster ride is causing new worries about the idea of putting Social Security dollars into the stock market. Supporters say they still think the nation's retirement system would be fit from putting some money in stoc But they're now cautioning that such privatization can't guarantee a comfort- able old age for everyone. "We shouldn't get carried away with the idea that ... we're going to make every worker an instant millionaire; Sen. Phil Gramm (R-Texas) said yesterday. Meanwhile, opponents who believe privatizing Social Security is too risky are saying, "I told you so." AROUND THE ;< ,i i /_ Swissair faces $50M lawsuit for crash HALIFAX, Nova Scotia - While the leaders of Canada and Switzerland joined in mourning the victims of Swissair Flight il1, lawyers on Wednesday filed a $50 million lawsuit over the crash, blaming technical defects in the aircraft. The lawsuit was filed in federal court in New York on behalf of former boxing champion Jake LaMotta, whose son, Joseph, was among the 229 people killed in the Sept. 2 crash in the Atlantic off Nova Scotia. The suit claims the MD-I 1 air- craft had wiring problems that should have been corrected. The suit named Swissair: its partner, Delta Airlines; McDonnell Douglas, which manufactured the aircraft, and Boeing Co., which now owns McDonnell Douglas. The suit is likely to be followed by many others as lawyers try to hold the airlines and aerospace companies liable for the as-yet-unexplained crash that happened 16 minutes after the pilots reported smoke in the cockpit. The trou- ble started about an hour into a New York-to-Geneva flight. The litigation contrasted sharply the mood in Indian Harbor, Nova Scotia, where the largest of a series of memorial services was held at an elementary school sports field. U.S. envoy to restart peace talks in Israel JERUSALEM - Chief U.S. Mic East envoy Dennis Ross arrived in Israel yesterday, kicking off Washington's first big push in four months to break the impasse in the Middle East peace process. There was little expectation of a breakthrough in the negotiations, which have been frozen for 18 months. On the eve of Ross' arrival, the Israelis actively played down his chances for success, and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat was quoted in Israeli newspapers as bran Ross "an Israeli collaborator." * .c-e T B 'k > ! " -. ., . I eVYop~t. SOfl-) rosi9 #1 Ple. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) 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 s - 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 764-0558: Classified advertising 764-0557: Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.fetters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/. NEWS Janet Adamy, Managing Editor EDITORS: Maria Hackett, Heather Kamns, Jeffrey Kosseff. Chris Metinko. STAFF: Melissa Andrzejak, Christina Branson. Adam Cohen. Gerard Cohen-vngnaud, Nikita Easley. Rachel Edelman, Trevor Gardner, Rachel Groman. 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Michelle McCombs. Jordan Young. TLO) ,rsa nat- ASSOCIATE MANAGER: Lindsay Bleier. STAFF: Nate Heisler, Ryan Hopker, Craig Isakow, Melissa Kane, Sonya Kleerekoper, Meredith Luck. Sunitha Mani. Jennie Mudrey, Angie Nelson. Kanako Ono, Divya Ramakrishnan, Susan Rosenberg. Deborah Skolnik, Michael Solomon, Dawn Spechler. Megan Spillane. Nandita Subhedar. rm crl% I If' 1 4 . e i menus 1 I -Z7/- al 1U NCL. _. -- I