2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 29, 1998 GLENN Continued from Page 1A sion is now estimated to be I in 233, still far more likely than the chance of a person being struck by lightning (about one in a million). But the space agency has launched 66 shuttles safely since the Challenger and NASA officials say there has been no slackening in the "emphasis on safety. Shuttle crews do not dwell on the dan- gers, said James Wetherbee, director of flight crew operations. "Astronauts tend to think about risk differently than most folks," Wetherbee said. He said crew members may think about the risks on the night before a launch, but they then put the thoughts aside and focus on the intense activity of a launch. "You don't think about any- thing but your job," he said. If astronauts were to die again in a shuttle accident, particularly on a high- profile flight like Glenn's, NASA would face some political risk as well. "If people were killed, the existence of the agency might be in jeopardy," said Seymour Himmel, a former top NASA official and a member of the agency's advisory panel of outside safety experts. There was management complacen- cy and inattention to warnings about a faulty booster rocket joint prior to the Challenger disaster. If similar failings were found again, it surely would trig- ger another round of soul-searching. More immediately, some space policy analysts have been concerned that the launch crews could be rusty, because NASA's last shuttle launch was on June 2. That is the longest stand-down since the post-Challenger investigation grounded shuttles for 2 1/2 years. Ground crews have performed six mock countdowns and four fueling rehearsals during the down time to keep an edge on their skills. NATION/WORLD Students: Colleges unfairly blame alcohol The Department of Philosophy The University of Michigan announces THE TANNER LECTURE ON HUMAN VALUES Walter Burkert Honorarprofessor University of Zurich REVEALING NATURE AMIDST MULTIPLE CULTURES. A DISCOURSE WITH ANCIENT GREEKS Friday, October 30, 4:00 p.m. Rackham Amphitheatre, 915 East Washington Street SYMOSWM ON THE TANNER LECTURE WALTER BURKERT WENDY DONIGER Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religion University of Chicago, Divinity School SARAH MORRIS Professor of Classics University of California, Los Angeles FRANCESCA ROCHBERG Professor of History University of California, Riverside Saturday, October 31, 9:15 a.m. Vandenberg Room, Michigan League All events open to the public without charge ALCOHOL Continued from Page 1A "There is a huge emphasis on underage drinking. It's crazy." Rahl said MSU wrongly blamed alcohol for inciting the riot. "Ever since I got here, there has been a huge crackdown of alcohol,"' Rahl said. "Any way they can blame alcohol they will." At universities where alcohol is relat- ed more definitively to a tragedy, admin- istrators launched massive anti-alcohol initiatives. Last spring a group of Washington State University students, who had been drinking heavily in celebration of the last week of classes, reacted violently when police officers attempted to break up a party. The night ended with student arrests, property damage and 10 injured police officers. "The disturbance crystallized the problem of drinking and the impacts it has on relationships with alumni, stu- dents and the community," said John Thielbahr, director of conferences and institutes at WSU. Following the occurrence, the school was awarded a $250,000 state grant for student alcohol awareness programs. "We decided that we needed to expose this on a national basis," Thielbahr said, adding that he currently is working on gathering experts for a national teleconference Nov. 13 that will address collegiate drinking. Thielbahr said colleges from around the country were invited. Although Western Michigan University, Michigan Technological University and MSU are taking part in the conference, WSU has not yet received a response from the University. Thielbahr said the event triggered the renewed emphasis on alcohol awareness, although it was always a priority. "There have been ongoing pro- grams, including initiatives from frater- nities to go alcohol-free," Thielbahr said. "We want students to see that alco- hol is as dangerous as anything else they're facing."' But some students questioned the effectiveness of any administrative efforts. "Awareness hasn't changed," said a WSU sophomore who did not want to be identified. "People still drink just as much," She added that members of Greek Row, which is supposed to be "dry," go out to drink regularly - despite the "overboard" efforts of the local police department and university administrators to decrease drinking on campus. Penn State University, where riots occurred this past summer during an annual arts festival, also is struggling to bring alcohol awareness to stu- dents. The Daily Collegian, the universi- ty's student newspaper, reported that some students were drinking and got out of hand. Bryan Shine, a representative in Penn State's student government, said the university spends too much time blaming alcohol for uncontrolled inci- dents. "I think they are going a little too far," Shine said. Shine said recent incidents have caused a crack down on alcohol. Shine said the riots this past sum- mer caused the administration embarrassment. "They are all about anti-drinking" Shine said. "The state troopers come to campus during the football games" Shine said the university should address other issues besides alcohol. Deal may binge on Palestinian pledge WASHINGTON - Despite Israeli- Palestinian quarrels over their land-for- security accord, yesterday President Clinton predicted Israel would approve the deal if the Palestinians carry out their pledge to take action against terrorism. "Peace is a difficult business in the Middle East," Clinton said during a Rose Garden news conference. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has threatened to delay sub- mitting the agreement he reached with Yasser Arafat to his Cabinet until the Palestinians submit their security plan. Palestinians say Netanyahu is looking for an excuse to placate hard-line mem- bers of his government who are against the agreement. "I believe that if we complete the security arrangements that were agreed to at Wye, that the Israeli government will approve this and honor their com- mitment and will go forward," Clinton said, adding a caution "not to overreact to every little hump and turn in the road" He said mistrust was not expected to completely evaporate during the nine days of summitry at Wye, Md., and that Netanyahu and Arafat were both "quite brave" to reach the agreement. At the same time, Clinton s* Netanyahu wants to be "absolutely assured" the Palestinian Authority will follow through on countering terrorism before moving ahead with a withdrawal on the West Bank. State Department spokesperson James Rubin said the Palestinians would submit an action plan to counter terrorism by tomorrow. These security measures by the Palestinians are a major compon of the Wye agreement. Museum updates scientific facts WASHINGTON - The biggest exhibit at the National Museum of Natural History has a problem: It's a whale without a belly button. A critique done for the museum says, "A blue whale's umbilicus - roughly 8 inches across - is not a subtle feat and cannot be omitted from an accura model." As part ofa five-year, $26 million ren- ovation, the museum plans to replace the 92-foot-long, 40-year-old model and change other exhibits as well, to bring them more up-to-date scientifically. Officials also plan a new focus for the country's largest collection of spec- imens, part of the Smithsonian Institution. AROUND THE NATI Scaled-back AIDS treatments fail Two experimental attempts to cut down on the 15 to 20 pills a day that HIV- infected people must take to keep AIDS at bay failed when the virus bounced back quickly in many patients. Over the past few years, the three-drug AIDS "cocktail" has turned AIDS from a death sentence to a manageable illness. However, patients must take their pills an excruciatingly precise schedule. Some pills must be taken with a quart of wa some on an empty stomach, some only after eating. Missing a few can let the virus mutate into forms resistant to the drugs. In two studies published in today's New England Journal of Medicine, researchers tried to find out what would happen if they cut back on medication once the drugs had reduced the virus to almost undetectable levels. It's the way cancer is treated: hit it hard and fast at the start, then follow up with easier-to-take maintenance therapy. Doctors in France and the United States took different approaches but got results so disappointing that both studies were ended early. In the United States, virus levels shot up rapidly in nearly one-quarter of the patients when medication was cut back to just one or two of the drugs. Leadership through theory and practice Where better to earn your masters degree than at a center of the world of work -- and from a university that pioneered programs serving adult AROUND THE . . « WORIL.D. " learners? Lawrence Tech offers: " Convenient evening classes " A "real world" emphasis with industry-savvy faculty " Small classes and personal attention * A focus on technology and careers for tomorrow Apply now for spring, summer and fall classes. MASTER OF ARCHITECTURE MASTER OF AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERING MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION MASTER OF COMPUTER SCIENCE MASTER OF CIVIL ENGINEERING MASTER OF ENGINEERING IN MANUFACTURING SYSTEMS MASTER OF SCIENCE EDUCATION MASTER OF SCIENCE IN INDUSTRIAL OPERATIONS MASTER OF SCIENCE IN INFORMATION SYSTEMS Pinochet immune from prosecution LONDON - The High Court ruled yesterday that Augusto Pinochet is immune from prosecution in British courts and ordered the British govern- ment to pay the former Chilean dictator's legal costs of $560,000. The court threw out two Spanish arrest warrants, acted upon by British authorities. The warrants sought Pinochet's extradition to face charges of murder, kidnapping and torturing politi- cal opponents during his 17-year dicta- torship. In his ruling, Lord Chief Justice Thomas Bingham said it was "of course a matter for acute public concern that those who abuse sovereign power to commit crimes against humanity should not escape trial and appropriate punish- ment." But nothing, including the charter that established the International War Crimes Tribunal at Nuremberg in 1945, invali- dated the principle "that one sovereign state will not impugn another relation to its sovereign acts," Bingham said. In Madrid, lawyers trying to extradite Pinochet to Spain criticized the British court but said they remained hopeful that an appeals court would eventually ov turn the ruling. W "I was very optimistic until today;' said lawyer Virginia Diaz, who has worked closely on the case. "We were surprised by the ruling," said.Diaz, who argues that international law clearly rules out immunity in cases of crimes against humanity. U.N. envoy meets with junta member YANGON, Myanmar - A U.N. envoy met yesterday with a top member of Myanmar's ruling junta, a day after meeting an outspoken government critic, opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. The meeting between Alvaro de Soto, a representative of U.N. Secretary- General Kofi Annan, and intelligence chief Lt. Gen. Khin Nyunt, took place hours before the release of a U.N. rep critical of government repression. - Compiled fom Daily wire reports. Lounge Chair Theatre presents FRIGIT M iI'the Union Two nights of Sd-Fi and Horror (and some cool giveaways) U IE RS e mo ITYle 4 U N IVER S IT Y 21000 West Ten Mile Road Southfield, MI 48075-1058 1-800-CALL-LTU www.ltu.edu MORPH INTO ANOTHER LIFEFORM WITH ALTERED STATES "741 the MI "...gab a stot.) - ,oj/4-y is pu insUu JMonUday through riuuay uurinng ine ra ano winter terms oy students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail ares $85. 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GRAPHICS STAFF: Alex Hogg, Vicky Lasky, Michelle McCombs, Jordan Young. BUSINES STAF Ada JOHN CARPENTER'S THE THING TAKE A "BITE" OUT OF YOUR FALL DOLDRUMS WITH THE LOST BOYS n M401-