2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 30, 1998 NATION/WORLD MOVE Continued from Page 1. it's important for the office to be near the computer lab in Angell Hall and to be near the Diag where many students congregate. The office "needs to be near phones, computer systems and phone access. Especially since there is no (paper) course guide, our operation is very reliant on being where students are," Wittkopp said. Orientation advisers, Wittkopp said, use classrooms in Mason and Angell halls. "It's very disappoipting that he decided to make the decision with- out really considering the services that we provide to students," Wittkopp said. LSA Adviser Cindy Barhyte said she doubts many students will take the opportunity to stop by the presi- dent's office in Angell Hall to talk Bollinger "I understand presidents wanting to be more accessible to students," Barhyte said. "We are concerned it seems President Bollinger has lumped us with paper-pushing administrators, and we are not." Consistent face-to-face contact with students is part of an adviser's job, Barhyte said. University Registrar Tom McElvain said he does not know where Bollinger plans to move some of the Registrar offices. "I do not yet know how Angell Hall will be reconceived," McElvain said. "I don't think it's necessarily negative about a move in Angel! Hall." McElvain described the offices the Registrar currently occupies as decent. He added that there are many equal or more accessible loca- tions where the offices can be moved. "I didn't think it would be a terrible thing if we moved," McElvain said. Sara Chester, undergraduate secre- tary for the Anthropology Department, said the issue of moving is not "super pressing." "As far as we know, we are not going to move for a couple of years;' Chester said. GIACHERIO Continued from Page 1 college students is on the rise. According to a National Household Survey on Drug Abuse, about 1.7 mil- lion Americans used cocaine at least once a month in 1996. Cocaine use is shown to be highest among Americans between the ages of 18 and 25. According to a National Institute of Drug Abuse research report, the num- ber of people throughout America using heroin continues to increase - most users are under the age of 26. About 2.4 million people reported using heroin at some point in their lives, while 216,000 reported to have used heroin within the past month, according to the 1996 NHSDA survey. NIDA attributes the rise of heroin use to a decrease in cost and higher purity of the product. Users can use the drug easier now since heroin can be smoked and snorted, instead of injected. - Daily Staff Reporter Jennifer Yachnin contributed to this report. GANDHI Continued from Page 1 list of local organizations, including the City of Ann Arbor and the Ann Arbor Police Department. Arun Gandhi currently lives in Memphis, Tenn., where he works with the M.K. Gandhi Institute for Non-Violence. He also has lived in both India and South Africa for years. The humiliation and oppression he suffered under apartheid in South Africa was fuel for anger, Arun Gandhi said, but time spent with his grandfa- ther in India, soon showed him how to control his rage and channel it into something useful. His grandfather told Arun Gandhi to write down every incident of vio- lence he experienced at night before he went to bed, whether the act was physically or passively violent. In a few years, he said, the list covered his entire wall. "I was surprised by how much vio- lence had occurred on a day-to-day basis," Arun Gandhi said. "Passive vio- lence is something that we often don't recognize." The problems society experiences today must be solved through educa- tion and dialogue, he said. Laws cannot force people to respect one another, he said. "What we have today is basically nine-to-five integration," Arun Gandhi said. "That's not integration - that's not what Dr. King and grandfather dreamed about." SNRE sophomore Abheshek Narain said he enjoyed hearing the thoughts of someone who had experienced so much. "I thought that his speech was very pertinent to our generation," Narain said. "We're supposed to be the future of this country." DEBATE Continued from Page 1. learned from the students, just as the students learned about the can- didates' platforms. They heard about issues that directly affect students, including the Code of Student Conduct, grad- uate student instructor concerns and parts of the recently passed Higher Education Act. Natural Law candidate William Quarton joined Rappaport at the event, along with Libertarian James Montgomery and Reform candidate Ray Vinton, who is a stu- dent at the University's Flint cam- pus. Rappaport, Quarton and Montgomery are all Ann Arbor res- idents. LIKE TO WRITE? HAVE SOME FREE JOIN T E DAtLY. A COME TO '420 MYNARD ST. OR CALL 76-DAILY. Tobacco spent $43M to kill legislation WASHINGTON - The tobacco industry spent more than $43 million on lobbying in the first half of this year, 23 percent more than in all of 1997, much of it to kill a national tobacco bill championed by public health groups and the White House, according to a report released yesterday by Public Citizen, which favored the bill. More than $18 million of Big Tobacco's expenditures went to outside lobbying firms, with the largest chunk, about $7.2 million, going to the D.C. law firm of Verner, Liipfert, Bernhard, McPherson and Hand, where former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell and former Texas governor Ann Richards worked on the tobacco issue. The huge lobbying outlays, nearly three times what the industry spent in the first half of last year, "put the voice, the message and the pressure of the tobacco industry way ahead of the citi- zen," said Joan Claybrook, president of Public Citizen, a Washington-based interest group founded by Ralph Nader. The industry defeated the tobacco bill with a combination of "enormous campaign contributions" to gain access to lawmakers, high-priced lobbyists and an unprecedented advertising car- paign, she said. Ecstasy found to damage brain cells Ecstasy, a drug popular at all-night dance parties known as "raves," appears to damage brain cells that release a chemical responsible for mood, memory and pain perception, a study has found. Dr. George Ricaurte, a neurologist The Johns Hopkins University School Medicine, conducted brain scans on peo- ple who had used the illicit drug an aver- age of 200 times over a five-year period. The drug damaged cells that release serotonin, a natural chemical that is asso- ciated with feelings of well-being. Ricaurte, however, said the study was not designed to show whether Ecstasy caused emotional problems only whether it caused physical changes in the brair* AROUND THE NATION FDA approves first breast cancer drug WASHINGTON - The Food and Drug Administration yesterday approved the use of tamoxifen as the first drug to prevent breast cancer in healthy women who are regarded at very high risk of developing the disease. The drug, which has long been a potent treatment for already-diagnosed breast cancer, can bring potentially serious side effects. Women at significant risk 1 developing breast cancer will have to decide which threat is greater, and whether it is worth the gamble to start taking the drug when they are still healthy, the FDA said. "This is not a simple, straightforward decision, but calls for a fairly sophisticat- ed choice," said acting FDA Commissioner Michael Friedman. "We know that tamoxifen has real serious side effects, and that not all women who take it get ben- efits from it. But we do know that some women at high risk have a very meaningful reduc- tion in that risk." The agency stressed that a woman's decision to take the drug must be made very carefully, in consultation with her physician and taking multiple risk factors into account. Chief among tamoxifen's side effects is a higher-than-average chance of deve- oping uterine cancer and blood clots of the major veins and lungs. .Fr 'A .... ... :Y 1.. i4:. . Y F . - a o , .., ' S.' . I . " _ r :+ . AROUND THE WORLD F ' ,; , '.f f t - -. ; . . ..a, . ," v ;. . -, ... > ~ , ° .. < , =-+ ~'. , ' ,,. , , .. .. ' ° - _ a° .. t^' a 'Kc 10. .: we. . n: - f . :w .. 'ti "- a 'n: e w . _, " ; '; 4 r' .! S. Aica releases new apartheid report PRETORIA, South Africa - South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission unveiled an unprecedent- ed official history of the apartheid era yesterday, describing the nation's for- mer white leaders as chief perpetrators of gross human rights violations but also accusing President Nelson Mandela's African National Congress of an array of abuses in its anti- apartheid struggle. Overcoming the ANC's eleventh- hour legal bid to block its release, the much-anticipated report made public a hard-hitting and comprehensive por- trait of 30 years of the 1948-94 period of white-minority rule. But the report also hit at the ANC's claim to the nation's moral high ground. In so doing, it curried the disfavor of Mandela's ruling party just as it has the apartheid-era rulers. "Many will be upset by this report;" said Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the truth commission chair, in handing the five-volume, 3,500-page report to Mandela. "Some have sought to dis- credit it preemptively. ... Fellow South Africans, accept this report as a way, an indispensable way of healing, who we have looked the beast in the eye." Poet laureate Ted Hughes dies at 68 LONDON - British poet laureate Ted Hughes, whose failed marriage to the tortured American poet Sylvia Plath earned him the wrath of many femin but inspired some of his best writing, died of cancer, it was announced yester- day. He was 68. The reclusive poet, ranked by some critics alongside such 20th-Century greats as T.S. Eliot and W.H. Auden, died at his home in Devon on Wednesday. "After a valiant 18-month fight against cancer, Ted Hughes died yester- day. The loss to his family is ines- timable," Hughes's publishers at Faber and Faber said. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. Now if you don't know the answers on the test, you can call someone who does. Oay, so maybe you're a - no credit checks', one of those Einsteins who and no long-term commitments. Plus, knows all the answers. Well, AirTouch is offering special discounted what you may not know is, with AirThuch rates to Michigan college students. Student Prepaid Cellular, you purchase So even if you're already the whatever airtime you want in advance. smartest person in class, you can There are no contracts, no monthly bills, look even smarter with AirTouch. RELIGIOUS SIERVICIES AVAVAVAVA CANTERBURY HOUSE JAZZ MASS Episcopal Center at U of M 721 E. Huron St. Ann Arbor, MI 48104 (734) 665-0606 The Rev. Matthew Lawrence, Chaplain SUNDAYS 5:00 Holy Eucharist with live jazz Steve Rush and Quartex ASSEMBLY OF GOD EVANGEL TEMPLE - 769-4157 2455 Washtenaw (at Stadium) Free van rides from campus "Seven Habits of Highly Effective People" College/Career Class 9:30am SUNDAY WORSHIP: 10:30am www.assemblies.org/mi/evangeltemple JESUS AWAKENING MOVEMENT FOR AMERICA The Korean Hope Presbyterian Church 2600 Nixon Rd. Ann Arbor, MI 48105 (734) 973-9025 Date: November 13 - November 15 LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY Lord of Light Lutheran Church(ELCA) 801 S. Forest (at Hill St.) 668-7622 Sun. Worship 10 am, Bible Study 9 am Tulesdavu7 rnm: cIsues of jFaith, Gron The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday througF 1-riday during tne fall ano 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 $165.0On-campus sub- 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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