2 -- The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 29, 1999 NATION/WORLD VOLVO Continued from Page 1L 1989, Ford paid $2.5 billion for Jaguar and wound up pouring an additional $3.5 billion into updating Jaguar's plants and model lineup, returning the luxury automaker to profitability. "People will place a lot of impor- tance on Volvo remaining Volvo," said Christer Karlsson, an analyst with the Stockholm Institute of Economics. "One of the advantages with Ford is that they don't completely Americanize their (foreign) products, but let them - retain their special qualities." In addition to Jaguar, Ford also owns luxury automaker Aston Martin of England, the Lincoln and Mercury brands in North America, and one-third of Japan's Mazda Motor Corp. Wall Street reacted favorably to the deal. Ford shares were up 3.3 percent, rising $2 to $62.31 1/4 a share in late trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Leif Johansson, president of Volvo, said his company will use the money to aggressively expand its commercial vehicle operations, which makes trucks and buses, con- struction equipment, marine and heavy-duty diesel engines, and aero- space equipment. IMPEACH Continued from Page 1 - which would permit videotaping of the questioning and leave open the pos- sibility that it would be aired publicly. The voting came after hours of spar- ring between Republicans and Democrats over the way to conduct the final stages of the trial. Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.), the major- ity leader, put the rival plans to votes with a minimum of explanation, which prompted one of his colleagues to ask about details. But Chief Justice William Rehnquist declined to answer Sen. Orrin Hatch, (R-Utah). "The parliamentarian tells me it is never the function of the chair to inter- pret a resolution," Rehnquist said. Republicans wanted. to leave room for a vote on "fact finding" that would state formally that Clinton had commit- ted offenses, even if he wasn't to be removed from office. The Democratic scenario would have prevented Republicans from even sub- mitting such a document for a vote. On the issue of witness questioning, Democrats wanted to exclude any videotaped material from the trial record - meaning that images of Lewinsky would not be available for public showing. The Republicans countered with a proposal to allow portions of the depo- sitions to be made public "whether tran- scribed or on videotape." The votes unfolded suddenly after a day in which the trial had marked time while backroom negotiations dragged on. "We're talking aggressively," Lott said at one point after he and Democratic Leader Tom Daschle had met and swapped proposals. At the White House, spokesperson Joe Lockhart called for a swift end to the trial and said that in the Senate, "the Republican majority has to answer to the country of why they want co contin- ue to extend this process." AROUND THE NATION - Spice Girls fan allegedly robs hair salon SANTA CRUZ, Calif. - She wore a Spice Girls T-shirt, her blonde hair cut in a conservative bob. His striped sweater was clean and neat. Detectives figured the pair who allegedly pulled off two armed robberies weren't run-of-the-mill crimi- nals. But even they were surprised to learn the suspects were students at th University of California, Santa Cruz, and their alleged getaway driver an elemetf tary school teaching aide. Emma Rose Freeman, 18, a National Merit Scholar, is accused of pointing a .380-caliber Beretta semiautomatic handgun at a terrified stylist then robbing a hair salon on Jan. 16 with her boyfriend Anthony Louis Christophani, a senior phi- losophy major. Five days later when a security guard at a Costco warehouse store asked to see receipts for a boom box and Walkman-like stereo system, she allegedly turned to him with the gun and said: "Back off. Don't do anything stupid." On Wednesday, it was Miss Freeman who shook with fear as a judge warned that she could spend 25 years to life in prison if convicted of the two armed rob- beries. WANT TO READ THE DAILY TWO DAYS EARLY? BUY TODAY'S DETROIT NEWS OR FREE PRESS. Gay men having much more an sex ATLANTA - The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that the number of gay men in San Francisco who reported having unpro- tected anal sex increased to 39.2 per- cent in 1997, from 30.4 percent in 1994. Those who said they had unprotect- ed sex with multiple partners grew to 33 percent in 1997, up from 23.6 per- cent in 1994, the CDC said. Males 25 and younger accounted for the largest increase in that group. The agency said there is mounting evidence that young gay and bisexual men are less likely to engage in safe sex than older counterparts. Another sign of the rise in unsafe sex is the rate of reported cases of rec- tal gonorrhea among men. The disease declined in San Francisco in the early 1990s but increased from 21 per 100,000 in 1994 to 38 per 100,000 in 1997, the CDC said. "I'm afraid that the evidence of the San Francisco study is indicative of a problem all around the country," Zingale said. "While our investment in AIDS care and research is paying off through lower death rates, our divestment from HIV preventionis creating a new epi- demic for a new generation of Americans." 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Day news editors out of work By Chris Metinko, Janet Adamy and Maria Hackett Daily News Editors Former Daily News Editors Janet Adamy, Chris Metinko and Mara Hackett will now be taking up dona- tions outside of Ashley's Pub on State Street, as each prepare to embark on their fruitless and finan- cially depressing journalism careers.a "I figure, this Metinko what I'll be doing in four months anyhow, why not start early?" said Adamy, former Daily managing news editor In just one afternoon , all three edi- tors earned more begging formoney for liquor outside of the bar than they made during their entire careers at w 'bd The Daily "Twelve cents an y ,y hour - now that's journalism," Hackett said, "Unless you falsify stories and pratice yellow jour- nalism, there's no tdas rmoneyin it"' Metinko, whose career prospects are substantially more promising that Adamy's, said he'd be happy to give her some of the newspapers that contain his arti- cles to keep warm when she's sleep- ing on the street next year. "Who ever said journalists weren't considerate of each other?" Adamy asked upon hearing the offer. The three agreed that part of their difficulty in Hackett obtaining new jobs could be related to their unwillingness to work more than three days per week. "Hey, we're seniors," Hackett explained. "We're supposed to party starting Thursday night - not work!" Despite this, the three have explored other sources of income, including spending a week working for the adver- tising staff of a newspaper so they can save enough money to live for the next year. "I wouldn't call it selling out;' Metinko said. "It's more like renting out your soul for a few days." Dutch whores may soon become lega -/4ut qsunojJ of spqgiozq moIppinlom utuq 3q tijq iUg1Ji paJlom siuauodd0 'uoiinitsoid owur paoaoj sawpa~tuos axleot{m doing u~iasej pug IUxiv 'ersv woJJ u3uom pug? Si~iOf-uaa1 jo uopitiidxa p! 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The research by scientists in Iceland - which involved' the longest follow-up of any such study to date - showed that 16 percent of those who used the combination did not smoke for six years, compared to 8.5 percent of those who relied only on a patch., - Compiled from Daily wire reports. I 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 su 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. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): 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.letters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://www.michigandaily.com. NEWS Janet Adamy, Managing Editor EDITORS: Maria Hackett, Heather Kamins, Chris Metinko. STAFF: Melissa Andrzejak, Paul Berg, Marta Brill, Nick Bunkley. Karn Chopra, Adam Brian Cohen, Gerard Cohen-Vrignaud, Nikita Easley, Nick Falzone, Lauren Gibbs, Jewel Gopwani, Michael Grass, Erin Holmes, Jody Simone Kay, Yael Kohen, Sarah Lewis, Kelly O'Connor, Katie Piona,- Asma Rafeeq, Nika Schulte, Mike Spahn, Jason Stoffer, Avram S. Turkel, Daniel Weiss, Jaimie Winkler, Jennifer Yachnin, Adam Zuwerink. CALENDAR: Katie Plona. EDITORIAL Jack Schillaci, Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Emily Achenbaum, Jeffrey Kosseff. Sarah Lockyer, David Wallace STAFF: Chip Cullen, Ryan DePietro, Jeff Eldridge, Jason Fink, Seth Fisher. Lea Frost, Eric Hochstadt, Scott Hunter, Diane Kay, Thomas Kujurgis, Sarah LeMire, James Miller, Abby Moses, Peter Romer-Friedman, Killy Sc heer, Megan Schimpf, Orew Whitcup, Paul Wong. Nick Woomer. SPORTS Jim ose, Managing Editor EDITORS: Josh Kleinbaum, Sharat Raju, Pranay Reddy, Mark Snyder. STAFF: TJ. Berka, Josh Borkin, Evan Braunstein, Dave Den Herder. Dan Dingerson, Chris Duprey. Jason Emeott, Jordan Field, Mark Francescutti, Rick Freeman, Geoff Gagnon, Rafael Goodstein, Chris Grandstaff, Rick Harpster, Michael Kern, Vaughn R. Kug, Andy Latack, Chris Langrill, Ryan C. Moloney, Stephanie Offen, Kevin Rosenfield, Tracy Sandler. Michael Shafrir, Nita Srivastava, Uma Subramanian, Jacob Wheeler. Jon Zemke. ARTS Jessica Eaton, Christopher Tkaczyk, Editors WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Aaron Rich, Will Weissert SUB-EDITORS: Gabe Fauri (Music). Chris Cousino (Tv/Newmedia), Anna Kovalszki (Fine/Peforfitng Arts), Ed Sholinsky (Film), Corinne Schneider (Books) STAFF: Amy Barber, Matthew Barrett; Clancy Childs, Brian Cohen, Jenny Curren, Jimmy Draper, Jeff Druchniak, Cortney Duweke, Brian Egan, Laura Flyer. Steve Gertz, Jenni Glenn, Jewel Gopwani. Caitin Hail. Gina Hamadey, Garth Heutel, Eizabeth Holden, Chris Kula, Bryan 'Lark. lie Lin, Kristin Long, Kelly Lutes, Ryan Malkin, James Miller, Rob Mitchum. Andrew Mortensen, Kerri Murphy, Dikran Orneklan, Erin Podolsky, Lauren Rice, Adin Rosli. Amanda Scotese, Gabriel Smith, Ted Watts, Juquan Williams, Leah Zaiger. PHOTO Margaret Myers, Warren Zinn, Edito ARTS EDITOR: Adriana Yugovich ASSISTANT EDITORS: Louis Brown, Dana Linnane STAFF: Darby Friedlis, Jessica Johnson, Dhani Jones, Annie Liebowitz, Kelly McKinnel, David Rochkind, Nathan Ruffer, Sara Schenk. ONLINE Satadru Pramanik, Editor STAFF: Amy Chen, Victor Kucek, Rajiv Rajani, Paul Wong. GRAPHICS STAFF: Ales Hogg.,Vicki Lasky. DISPLAY SALES, Nathan Rozof, Manager r -w.1 "-'T' T - __T_/""\ T T /"