2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 26, 1998 MIDEAST Continued from Page 1A "He has taken controversial stands in the past;' said Amer Adati, treasurer of the the University's student chapter of the American-Arab Anti-discrimina- tion Committee. Adati continued by saying that Ellis, who is Jewish, has been criticized for his positions on the ;: peace process, and Israel's actions. "We expect a good turnout," Adati said. Ellis is a professor of Jewish studies at NATION/WORLD George Cantor says the Dawson Institute of !Church-State Relations at Baylor University. He has authored nine books, including "Unholy Alliance: Religion and Atrocity in Our Time" "Toward a Jewish Theology of Liberation" and "Beyond Innocence and Redemption: Confronting the Holocaust and Israeli Power." He also addressed the United Nations conference titled, "The Question of Palestine," and has been inducted into the Martin Luther King Jr. collegium of scholars at Morehouse College. Be A Step Ahead Of Othier Med School Applicants. Find out more about our. . Nationally renowned faculty. " Numerous student research opportunities. " Prime location in the heart of Chicago. Call or write for more information and a viewbook today. he has 'no animosity' the window "just to get documenta- tion," George Cantor said. Continued from Page IA "We're still racking our brains," columnist, said he thinks the win- he said. dows have a design flaw. "It doesn't In accordance with its Jewish take into account people of smaller faith, the Cantor family will observe size." a period of grieving. "We will wait a Courtney Cantor was 4 feet 10 month and then decide what is next," inches tall and weighed 114 pounds. said George Cantor, adding he has Abby Elgart, an LSA first-year "no animosity." student and Markley resident, said Courtney Cantor's sister Jaime, an she thinks Courtney Cantor's death LSA senior, will return to Ann was a "freak thing." Arbor tomorrow from the family's "I think it was good for the home in West Bloomfield, George University to do the inspection ... it Cantor said. was the appropriate action," Elgart In a column published in Sunday's said. edition of The Detroit News and After he was quoted in The Free Press, George Cantor stressed Michigan Daily saying his window that he didn't want his daughter to was broken, Markley resident Jeff be turned "into the poster child for Herman got a visit from Housing. campus drinking." Representatives fixed his broken Courtney Cantor's blood alcohol window, which opened 2 feet. level was 0.059, said Bader Cassin, Herman, an LSA first-year stu- Washtenaw County chief medical dent, said he thinks the window has examiner. an adequate design, but feels better In Michigan, a blood alcohol level now that his window is fixed. of 0.08 is considered impaired for "It gives you a feeling of securi- driving; 0.10 is considered drunk. ty," Herman said. His daughter's death "was just a When George Cantor's brother-in- stupid accident, without logic or law and cousin cleaned out reason. Not that this is any consola- Courtney Cantor's room last tion, but it is something that should Monday, they took photographs of be kept clear," George Cantor wrote. Fall Graduation Fair '98 Buy your cap and gown, order your class ring, and join the Alumni Association all at one place! The Graduation Fair is designed to take the stress AROUND THE NATION Gore breaks ground for memorial OKLAHOMA CITY - Thousands came to the site of the Oklahoma City bombing yesterday to break ground for a memorial to the 168 people who died, with Vice President Al Gore digging the first stoop of dirt. "The people who died here were victims of one of the cruelest visitations of q this nation has ever seen," Gore said. "But we offer them today not pity but honor, for as much as any soldier who ever fought in any war, they paid the price of our freedom." After speeches by Gore, Attorney General Janet Reno and other officials, Gore took a shiny shovel and dug it into the ground where the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building once stood. He handed the shovel to young Clint Seidl, who was in the second grade when his mother died in the 1995 bombing. She worked for the Secret Service, and Clint said he wants to do the same. Gore said several agents wanted to talk with Clint after the ceremony. Gore told those who ever wanted to demean the work of federal workers to "come here and be silent and remember." One after another, people grasped the shovel Gore passed to them and, dresse in their Sunday best, took a turn tossing a chunk of soil into a pile. The smartest med school candidates consider all their alternatives. And many have already applied- to Scholl College of Podiatric Medicine. Where the profession is going. Gates deposition tapes part of trial WASHINGTON - Bill Gates was out of his element, to be sure. Given to blunt talk as the combative chairperson of Microsoft Corp., Gates had to weigh his words cautiously under the probing of two government adversaries. For almost three days this summer, in a windowless conference room at Microsoft headquarters near Seattle, Gates resisted them. It was 20 hours of verbal jousting between the world's richest man and the government's top lawyers bent on proving him a predato- ry monopolist. Gates, admired and loathed for Microsoft's remarkable influence within the technology industry, won't testify to defend his company during the historic antitrust trial in Washington entering its second week. But he is such a central figure that government lawyers plan to show videotapes tomorrow of hours of his pretrial depositions, then to release the tape to television stations as evi- dence in the case. In the tapes, Gates discusses his fears that Internet software by rival Netscape Communications Corp., coupled with new programming language called J that doesn't require Windows, threatened his lucrative Windows operating system. Sniper kls New York abortion doctor BUFFALO, N.Y. - Dr. Barnett Slepian, an obstetrician-gynecologist, was killed by a sniper who fired a rifle bullet through a window in his honk Friday night. His was the first fatality among five sniper attacks on upstate New York or Canadian abortion providers in the last four years. The killer remained at large yester- day as an international investigation continued. Police listed no suspects. All of the previous attacks have occurred within a few weeks of Nov. 11, Veteran's Day, which is known Remembrance Day in Canada. Scholl College of Podiatric Medicine 1001 North Dearbom Street Chicago. IL 60610 312-280-2880 http://scholl.edu out of graduation! Today, October 26 1Oam-5pm & Tomorrow, October 27 1oam-8pm the best just keeps getting )tt re e now you can read anytime anywhere Michigan Union Ground Floor Graduation Checklist C Buy your cap and gown 0 Order your class ring C7 Join the Alumni Association C Arrange for Graduation Ceremony Tickets " Register to win a CD Player " Order a frame for your diploma " Order your yearbook O Sign up for UM-Online O Get your Alumni Athletic Tickets AROUND THE WORLD Sponsored by the Michigan Union Bookstore & The Michigan Union Program Board ol teO:l IWF nwn4r REC SPORTS ecncafr Wxt eW- Qe4cnse Hurricane Mitch threatens Caribbean KINGSTON, Jamaica - Driving rain squalls spawned by Hurricane Mitch forced churches to cancel ser- vices yesterday, flooded streets in the Jamaican capital of Kingston and sent residents scurrying for provisions. Under dark, menacing skies, seaports closed and buses and taxis stayed off Kingston's streets as Mitch, the 13th named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, swirled in the western Caribbean Sea south of Jamaica. Packing 145-mph winds, Mitch was a powerful Category 4 hurricane that could also threaten the Cayman Islands, Cuba, Honduras and Colombia's tiny islands off Central America, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said. Hurricane warnings were posted for Jamaica and eastern Cuba and a hurri- cane watch was in effect for the tourist islands of the Caymans. At 4 p.m. EST, Mitch was about 190 miles south-southwest of Grand Cayman. Crawling west-northwest at 8 mph, its hurricane-force winds of at least 74 mph extended 70 miles from the center. Sheets of rain reduced visibility to few yards while squalls pelt Kingston and Jamaica's eastern dis- tricts. With rain expected at least through today, authorities warned of mudslides and flash floods, especially in the mountains. Bomb blast kills Chechnya official GROZNY, Russia - Chechnyato anti-kidnapping official was killed yes- terday when a bomb tore his car to pieces on the day he was to launch a major offensive on hostage-takers in the break- away republic. Shadid Bargishev's two bodyguards were in critical condition, and several passersby also were injured, doctors said. Bargishev died on the operating table after losing both legs in the blast in the parking lot of the anti-kidnapping depag ment office in the Chechen capital W Grozny. - Compiled from Daily wire report. .. , .. V Eu 12 .a 1 % www.michigandaliy.com bookmark it! AN AN CI ENT & MYSTICAL MARTIAL AT FROM THE "ISLANDS oF FIRE" INDONESIA, A ALAYSIA, & S.E. ASIA. THIS MATIAL AT & SELF-DEFENSE COMBINES TRADITIONAL COMBAT TECHNIQUES WITH.,HAND TO HAND COMBAT, GROUND FGHTING AND WEAPONS. LEAKN DANCE LIKE MOVEMENTS OF AXLYASIA & WEST SUMATRA, INDONESIA, UTILIZING FLUID DEFENSIVE ACTIONS THAT AE COORDINATED WITH THE MUSIC & RHYTHMIC DRUMS OF WEST JAWA AND WEST SUMATRA. PRIVATE TRADITIONAL DANCE CLASSES WILL BE SCHEDULED. M~a tII'kt Sce Tovi#4! ____ P -ri r 11 et ri11 ' .. >i + . .. ,_y,. LIreal music. scheduled for 10.27 (tuesday) I "f"? .: rf = .. ,p e , \ , r 4 A r U of M Fall 98 Schedule Tuesday Evenings 8-10 PM CCRB Room 1200 Basement Thursday Momings 9:30-11 AM CCRB 1st Floor Nance-Aerobic Room Call for Information 734-930-9963 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 scriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. 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As an Account Executive, you will sell NEWS Janet Adamy, Managing Editor EDITORS: Maria Hackett, Heather Kammns. Jeffrey Kosseff, Chris Metinko. STAFF: Melissa Andrzejak, Paul Berg. Marta Brill, Adam CohenGerard Cohe.Vrignaud, Nikita Easley, Nick Faizone, Michael Grass, Katherine Herbruck, En Holmes, Josh Kroot, Kelly O'Connor, Katie Piona, Susan T. Port, Nika Schulte, Mike Spahn, Jason Stoffer, Avi Turkel, Jaimie Winkler, Jennifer Yachnin, Adam Zuwerink. CALENDAR: Katie Plona. EDITORIAL Jack SchUlaci, IkItr ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Sarah Lockyer, David Wallace* STAFF Emily Achenbaum Jeff Edride Jason Fink, Seth Fisher, Lea Frost, Kaamran Hafee, Eri Hochstadt, Scott Hunter, Diane Kay, Thomas Kulurgis, Sarah LeMire, James Miller. Abby Moses, Peter Romer-Fiedman, Killy Scheer, Megan Schimp, John Targowski, Paul Wong, Nick Woomer. SPORTS Jim Rose, Managing Editor EDITORS: Josh Kleinbaum, Sharat Raju, Pranay Reddy, Mark Snyder. STAFF: TJ. Berka, Josh Borkin. Evan Braunstein, Dave Den Herder. Dan Dingerson, Chs Duprey, Jason Emeott, Jordan Field, Mark Francescutti, Rick Freeman, Geoff Gagnon, Rick Harpster, Vaughn R. Klug, Andy Latack, Chris Langrill Ryan C. Moloney, Stephanie Offen, Kevin Rosenfield, Tracy Sandler, Michael Sharif, Nita Srivastava, Uma Subramanian, Jacob Wheeler, Jon Zemke. ARTS Kstin Long, Christopher Tkaczyk, Editors WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Jessica Eaton, Will Weissert SUB-EDITORS: Brian Cohen (Music), Michael Gallaway (TV/Newmedia), Anna Kovaiszki (Fine/Pefermirg Arts), JoshuaPederson (Filn), Corinne Schneider (Books) STAFF: Amy Barber, Matthew Barrett, Eugene Bowen, Cindy Childs, Chris Cousino, Jenni Curren, Timmy Draper, Jeff Druchniak, Coutney Duweke, Gabe Fajuri. Laura Flyer, Steve Gertz, Jenni Glenn, Jewel Gopwani. Joe Grossman, Garth Hentei. Kate Kovalski. Bryan Lark, JIe Lin, James Miller. Rob Mitchum. Kern Murphy, Erin Podoisky, Aaron Rich, Adlin Roshi. Deveron Q. Sanders, Ed Sholinsky, Gabriel Smith. Ted Watts. Curtis Zimmerman. PHOTO Margaret Myers, Warren Zinn, 5d Arts Editoi: Adrian Yugovich STAFF: Louis Brown, Allison Carter, Darby Friedlis, Jessica Johnson, Dana Unnane, Andi Maio. Rory Michaels, Kelly McKinnell, David Rochkind, Nathan Ru,,er, Sara Schenk. ONLINE satadru Pramanik, Edito STAFF: Amy Chen, Victor Kucek, Rajiv Rajani, Pal Wong. GRAPHICS STAFF: Alex Hogg. Vicky Lasky, Michelle McCombs, Jordan Young. BUSINESS STAFF Adam Smith, Business Manager I, !! -J, VW c ~ .".. release dates subject to change without notice, sorry. iS I M