2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 1, 1999 NATION/WORLD AIPAC Continued from Page 1A power of people in government. As a student at Swarthmore College in the 1950s, Levin partici- pated in a petition drive to collect signatures in support of the censure of former Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R- Wisconsin). McCarthy lead a vigor- ous search to expose U.S. citizens who he presumed to be communists, but was later was censured for acts unbecoming of a senator after his accusations were proved false. Levin and five other students col- lected 800 signatures from their cam- pus requesting that the government punish the actions of McCarthy. The group hand delivered the scraps of paper to their U.S. representative on the same day that one million signa- tures of McCarthy supporters were delivered in an armored car to Washington. Levin said photos of both deliveries were juxtaposed on the front page of every newspaper in the country the next day. Receiving so much attention for their efforts impacted him, he said. "You can do something with very few resources that come overcome larg- er resources," he said. Also speaking at the conference were Dan Senor, press secretary for Sen. Spencer Abraham (R-Mich.) and Bryce Sandler, the finance director for Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R-Bloomfield Hills). Both stressed the importance of experi- ence and networking to advance in political life. Conference Coordinator Donnie Tigay, an LSA senior, said she was extremely pleased with the outcome of the conference. "I was personally very impressed with the caliber of speakers we had,' she said. "It's great to say that on a Super Bowl Sunday we got about 150 people here. It shows how much they care about the issue." BOLLINGER Continued from Page IA ing" is among his top priorities for the year. He would like to see more money coming in from the state government. The University, "needs to keep at the forefront of the fields in which we work," Bollinger said. He said the private universities joining the University as the nation's leading research institu- tions often receive more money in donations and stock market gains. These monetary issues put the University in a very competitive position, he said. Today's ecture r.' 4 Da.'V vid Orr rEAward Winning Educator and Proponent o Deep Change .= On"Sustain able Education" Monday, February 1 at 4pm - Hale Auditorium at the U of M Business School, Hill and Tappan Streets. Free and Open to the Public. Awarded the Lyndhurst Prize for "individuals of exceptional talent, character, and moral vision," and the National Wildlife Federation's National Conservation Achievement Award. Author of "Earth in Mind", "Ecological Literacy", and over 90 published articles on education, nature, and sustainability. Commended by E. O. Wilson as "a rare author" who can inte- grate economics, ecology, and education. Professor of Environmental Studies and Politics, and Chair. of the Environmental Studies Program at Oberlin College. UMTV (Campus Cable) will carry live coverage of the entire series. Most presentations will also be covered live over Media One, cable channel 8 or 18. Lecture Series Sponsored by: The University of Michigan's Erb Environmental Management Institute, Corporate Environmental Management Program, Business School, School of Natural Resources and Environment, College. of Literature Science and the Arts, College of Engineering, and the Office of the Vice President for Research, with partial funding from the Dow Chemical Company AROUND THE NATION Census bureau mounts ad campaign WASHINGTON - Worried that segments of the U.S. population might not par- ticipate in the 2000 census, federal officials are mounting an ambitious $100-mil- lion advertising campaign to sell racial and ethnic minorities on the benefits of being counted. Young & Rubicam Inc., a giant New York advertising agency, is crafting an ov all media campaign - "This is your future. Don't leave it blank!" - to encoura? all U.S. citizens to fill out and return the mail-in census forms. Individual advertising companies, employed as subcontractors to Young & Rubicam, are creating targeted campaigns with overt racial or cultural mes- sages aimed at black, Latino/a, Asian American and American Indian popula- tions. Print and broadcast ads targeted at American Indians, for instance, draw attention to the family. "Generations are counting on this. Don't leave it blank!" they say. For black citizens, media messages evoke racial and community solidarity: "This is our future. Don't leave it blank." And ads aimed at Latino/as and Asian Americans translate the catch phrase Spanish, Japanese, Chinese, Korean and other languages to be used in ads deveT oped for ethnic media. Chim s o lSixth Conference on Retroviruses and Chi ps mostlikely Opportunistic Infections in Chicago source of HIV soin yesterday and they will be published in Thursday's edition of Nature. CHICAGO - Solving a long-puz- zling mystery about the origins of the Delphi nearing AIDS epidemic, Alabama researchers have shown that the most prevalent iu ependence 0 form of the AIDS virus, human immunodeficiency virus type 1, DAYTON, Ohio- General Motors almost certainly passed to humans Corp. is nearing the end of a two-year from a common subspecies of chim- effort to spin off its Delphi panzee. Automotive Systems Corp., a move Studying the virus in these ani- that is getting mixed reactions from mals could lead to new ways of pro- workers. tecting humans from disease, "I'm hopeful that it will work, but I experts said. guess it's wait and see," said Ahmad Examining the DNA compositions Abdul-Majid, a worker at the Delphi of HIV-1 and several chimpanzee brake plant in Dayton. viruses, Beatrice Hahn and her col- "It's a bad deal for people that's bet leagues at the University of Alabama working for GM all these years, said at Birmingham concluded that the Harley Turner, another brake plant virus passed from chimps to humans worker. three separate times in a small region He is concerned about whether he of West Equatorial Africa some 50 will be able to keep his job security and years ago before spreading to what is benefits. now estimated to be 35 million human GM is expected to offer up to 18 carriers. percent of Delphi in an initial public The transmission most likely offering on the New York Stock occurred during butchering of the ani- Exchange on Friday. GM will distro mals, which were subsequently eaten. ute the rest to GM shareholders later Hahn presented the results at the this year AROUND THE WORLD -/ Toreach the top, .you need support. , "'7/? AMI-LOAN is there for you! Fixed Interest1 i- 8-MHSL *or: (517) 373-3662 A~9#~01 Albanian leaders need to unite PRISTINA,Yugoslavia - Only days before Kosovo Albanians were expect- ed to talk peace with the Serbs, US. and British envoys were shuttling between hotel rooms, explaining con- ference plans to rival ethnic Albanians who wouldn't even sit together. Beyond that common goal of indepen- dence for their Kosovo homeland, ethnic Albanian leaders are divided by deep personal and philosophical differences, petty rivalries and a desire for power. The success of the international Kosovo peace conference, which the United States and five major European powers have called for Feb. 6, may depend largely on whether these groups can speak with a single voice in negoti- ations with the Serbs. "There is considerable pressure now for them to unite, and it's not only com- ing from the international community but from inside the Albanian communi- ty as well,"Veton Surroi, an influential ethnic Albanian journalist, told The Associated Press. Independence from the Yugoslav republic of Serbia is a goal agreed on by most Kosovo Albanians, who form 90 percent of the province's 2 mill* people. Mahmut Bakali, the former Communist Party president in Kosovo, says international pressure will proba- bly lead the rivals to overcome their dif- ferences. New crown prince enjoys the limelight AMMAN, Jordan -It was a hectic and unexpected-first week in office for Jordan's Crown Prince Abdullah, a career soldier thrown into the affairs ofa state by an ailing father who set aside the brother he had groomed to take the throne for 34 years. So far, his reviews are good-but he remains untested. For Abdullah himself, his schedule has permitted little time for reflection. The prince seemed taken aback by the limelight, a close confidant said, condition of anonymity. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 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 s 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 7630379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 7640552; Circulation 764.0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Bhting 764-0550. Email letters to the editor to daifyklettersumich.edu. World Wide Web: http://www.ouchigandaily.com. 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