News: 76-DAILY Display Ads: 764-0554 Classified Ads: 764-0557 OneIhegteatt On hnre eeyasojdnfdom~a Tuesday November 17, 1998 Ivl. Cx, No. 3AT tIS e. calls for test of Iraqi promise WASHINGTON (AP) Skeptical that Saddam Hussein will keep his word, the White House pressed for a swift test of Iraqi promises to cooperate with U.N. arms inspectors. The United States stopped its military buildup in the Persian Gulf but warned it could strike "at a moment's notice." *he world is watching Saddam Hussein to see if he follows the words he uttered with deeds," President Clinton said yesterday. "Our forces remain strong and ready if he does not." Reinforcing Clinton's statement, National Security Adviser Sandy Berger said that if Iraq does not com- ply, "There will be plenty of opportuni- ty for military force." The administration said it would be up to U.N. chief arms inspector Richard fer and his team to judge whether Iraq, in fact, allows unrestricted access to all sites the inspectors choose. "He's not been shy in the past about express- ing his views when he believes his work has been obstructed," White House press secretary Joe Lockhart said. Butler is to return to Iraq today. With tensions cooling, Clinton took the morning off to play golf. The White H ise also resumed plans for a presi- d ial trip at midweek to Japan, South Korea and Guam that had been put off as the United States moved toward attacking Iraq. Speaking to reporters, Clinton said the best outcome would be to get the inspectors back on the job with "unfet- tered access and full cooperation." Since the Gulf War, U.N. inspectors have forced, Iraq to destroy 40,000 chemical weapons, 700 tons of chemi- c eapons agents, a biological w aons plant, 48 missiles and 30 war- heads fitted for chemical and biological weapons. Clinton said. "Governments all over the world today stand united in sharing the con- viction that full compliance - and nothing short of full compliance - is needed from Iraq," Clinton added. Berger made the rounds of television talk shows to make the case that Coon had assembled the strongest consensus against Iraq since the Gulf War. He said Butler and his profession- al staff are in the best position to evalu- ate Iraqi compliance and set deadlines for producing documents about weapons programs. "We certainly hope that they will move as expeditiously as possible," Berger said. "I believe they will." But the administration said Butler would not be able to render an immedi- atoerdict. "It's going to take some time for them to go in and for them to continue on with their testing and establish whether they believe that Saddam Hussein is in compliance," Lockhart said. See IRAQ, Page 2 . DEVIS Some choose to run alone Dy Jennifer Yachnin Daily Staff Reporter survey says.. Killer evades AAPD By Nick Bunkley and Nikita Easley Daily Staff Reporters The Ann Arbor Police Department still is look- ing for suspected murderer Milton Castillo. who police believe shot brothers Roberto and Luis Rueda early Sunday morning at Stadium Apartments on the west side of Ann Arbor. AAPD Sgt. Michael Logghe said police still are searching the area and warning Ann Arbor resi- dents of Castillo. Police believe he is heading for Maryland, where Castillo - then known as Milton Marin - has some family ties, said Sgt. Andrew Zazula. "We are trying to piece everything together," Logghe said. Because of a language barrier between the police and many possible witnesses, Logghe said, it is difficult to determine specifics about the vic- tims and the suspect. Castillo's roommate found the brothers' bodies Sunday morning in Castillo's apartment at 1125 Norman Pl., near Stadium and Pauline boulevards. The Mediterrano restaurant on South State Street hired Castillo two weeks ago but fired him on Saturday morning because he was not right for the position, said manager Donald Bargos. Castillo switched cars at his mother's residence at Pine Valley Apartments where a police SWAT team just missed him, Zazula said. Police impounded Castillo's white Honda at that apartment. Mark Rowland, a resident of Stadium Apartments who lives across the hall from the crime scene, said he did not hear anything that morning. Rowland said he did not notice anything unusual when he entered his apartment at 5:30 a.m. Sunday morning and went to sleep an hour later. At about 11 a.m., he awoke to police banging on his door and demanding that he remain in his apartment, he said. "The AAPD wouldn't let anyone leave or come in," Rowland said. Two bullets went through the door of the apart- ment where the murders took place and became search A bullet hole marks the door across the hall from the apart- ment where two brothers were found murdered Sunday morning. MARGARET MYERS/Daily embedded in the outside wall of Rowland's apart- ment, leaving a pile of drywall pieces on the floor. He said that because of the two layers of brick in the apartment walls, the bullets did not pene- trate the entire wall. Rowland frequently watches television in a chair just on the other side of that wall. "The brick wall saved the bullets from coming in here," Rowland said. Rowland, who has lived at Stadium Apartments for one week, said police frequently are called to the apartments. "We've been here one week, and we've had the cops over here four out of the seven days," Rowland said. "I came out here to get away from this in Detroit." Rowland said he met the victims several times and the apartment across the hall was always full of visitors coming and going at all hours. He noted that he did not recognize the suspect in See MURDER, Page 2 DAVID ROCHKIND/Daily Greg McIntyre of Washtenaw Engineering surveys the area around Hill Auditorium yesterday. The company is preparing to make a map of both the Hill and the Modern Language Building areas. Lawmakers may create new drinking sanctions By Jason Stoffer Daily Staff Reporter If the recent wave of police raids on campus continues through the next leg- islative term, underage students caught with alcohol may need to worry about more than a fine and a slap on the wrist. Under a bill introduced by state Rep. Judith Scranton (R-Brighton) in the state House of Representatives, any minor between the ages of 18 and 21 will have their driver's license revoked if they are caught possessing alcohol. Since January, the Democratic majority has stalled Scranton's bill in the Judiciary Committee, but Scranton said she will reintroduce the bill when Republicans take control of the House next term. Many legislators from both parties agree the bill will pass through the Legislature and be signed into law. Scranton said recent events on the state's college campuses, including the death of a Michigan State University student after he drank 24 shots of hard liquor, demonstrate that stricter penal- ties are needed for minors possessing alcohol. "If you are underage and if you pos- sess alcohol or walk into 7-Eleven and try to buy alcohol, you are breaking the law and need to be punished," Scranton said. "Minors are unable to handle the responsibility of drinking (as demon- strated by) the high number of acci- dents involving kids using alcohol." Under the proposed legislation, stu- dents who get their driver's licenses revoked will not receive new licenses for 90 days or until they are 21 years old, whichever is longer. In addition, violators will not be eli- gible for a restricted license for working or other purposes. Many students across the campus said they do not understand how the possession of alcohol and operating a motor vehicle are linked. Rackham student Adam Chalom said the bill's proposed punishment for drinking does not fit the crime. See BILL, Page 7 LOUIS BROWN/Daily The cash register at Village Comer is decorated with photos from fake IDs that clerks spotted and confiscated. ING A STRATEGY FOR SUCCESS h Three parties vie for student votes Campaigning for a seat on the Michigan Student Assembly is not one big party - at least not for the candidates running independently. School of Music candidate Ariel Lauren Bamett, one of eight candi- dates on the fall election ballot who ose not to run separately from the ree registered student parties, said a party did not serve her specific platform. "I've decided to run independent- ly because being in the framework of a party would undermine some of my concerns, specifically about By Jennifer Yachnin Daily Staff Reporter Among the handful of student par- ties registered with candidates in the fall Michigan Student Assembly elec- tions, a former giant is no where to be found. "We were hit by graduation," said LSA junior Mehul Madia, a former Michigan Party Member. The Michigan Party, formed in 1993, began deteriorating in recent months and did not run a presidential slate in the elections last spring. "There were efforts last semester to recruit members ... but a lot of people went independent," said Madia, an MSA LSA representative. The increase in independent candi- Party will reappear in the Spring elec- tions, Madia said, the party's future is currently uncertain. The Students' Party, New Frontier Party and Defend Affirmative Action Party are the only registered groups in the fall election. The Students' Party currently con- trols MSA, with nearly 60 percent of the assembly, said Ron Page, Students' Party campaign chair. "Since we're not organized on the fly, we spend the whole year recruit- ing our candidates," Page said. Page said the party recruits students "with experience" on the assembly -- half of the party's fall MSA slate are incumbent candidates. The downfall of the Michigan Party 'U' awarded $2.5 million for grad education By Erin'Holmes Daily Staff Rteporter Early last spring, the University began working on a pro- posal to submit to the National Science Foundation. Today, Rackham School of Graduate Studies Dean Earl Lewis is in Washington, D.C. representing the University - one of only eight colleges nationwide that received a grant from the foundation - at a conference discussing the application of the nearly $2.5 million awarded for the pur- pose of moving forward in the field of minority graduate education. The money will fund a new five-year program to increase the number of black, hispanic and Native American students working toward doctoral degrees in the fields of science, mathematics and engineering. "The fact that we received this grant represents a lot of hard work and represents an opportunity for collaboration between the College of Engineering, LSA and Rackham," Lewis said. More than 200 other-universities applied for the grant. The enrollment numbers for Fall 1998 reveal that approximately 7.6 percent of enrolled students in the College of Engineering are among those groups consid- ered "underrepresented" - and none are Native uAVIu UUNDufuay LSA first-year student Kym Stewart puts up fliers in Angell Hall yesterday for the Michigan Student Assembly election. r---- --------------------------------- Independent candidates in tomorrow's election ; | LSA Music Vote in the MSA | Theresa Oney Ariel Lauren elections tomorrow Rory Diamond Barnett or Thursday. Vote Kevin Frame Rackham online at | I I I