2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 19, 1999 NATION/WORLD MSA Continued from Page 1 The party said it would also like to reach out to student groups and gath- er their opinions on issues facing stu- dents. By holding another monthly MSA meeting - devoted exclusively to lis- tening to the needs of campus groups - Students' Party members said they would be able to interact with a variety of students and develop new ways to make student life at the University bet- ter. "Let's bring the groups we work with inside a meeting to voice their concerns, whatever they are," Chopp said. In addition to improving campus life for current University students, the Students' Party is also targeting future students with new programs, including Freshman Forgiveness - a program designed to allow first-year students to retake one class and have the second grade figured into their grade point average. LSA first-year student and Students' Party candidate Allissa Koerner said she is excited about the Freshman Forgiveness program. "The Freshman forgiveness program is incredible," Koerner said. "Anyone who has spent their first semester at the University knows how hard it is to establish a high grade point." Party members said they think if a student is committed to putting the time and money into retaking a class, they should be rewarded for it. Another program to aid students, the Concentration Major Practicums for Peer Mentors, helps students make educated decisions about their future, a party member said. The peer advisers involved in the practicum would work in their pro- gram's department advising students who wapt to find out more informa- tion about the concentration and A UNIguE OPPORTUNITY TO INVESTIGA TE MEDICAL SCHOOLS... What are the admissions requirements?a Who are the successful applicants? Where should you apply? rSoaa S The Medical School S, M S " " " INFORMATION FAIR 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM Michigan Union s s s " " All students considering a career in medicine welcome Cosponsored with the Pre-Med Club Fair Ballroom 10:00AM - 2:00 PM e " Medical School Admissions Panel Ballroom 2:30 PM - 3:30 PM * Meet informally with medical school, post lac and test: . preparation representatives from across the country . : Collect tips at the Admissions Panel Visit our home page for a list of participating schools (www.cpp. umtich.cdu) .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . : R1SJ-JGIOU$ $1ERVICES AVAVAVAVA ASSEMBLY OF GOD Evangel Temple - 769-4157 2455 Washtenaw (at Stadium) Free van rides from campus Sunday Worship: 8am,10:30am www.assemblies.org/mi/evangeltemple FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH One church, two locations Downtown 120 South State Street 662-4536 SUNDAY: Worship at 9:30 and 11:00AM Green Wood Location 1001 Green Road 665-8558 SATURDAY: Upbeat Worship at 5:00PM LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY Lord of Light Lutheran Church (ELCA) 801 S. Forest (at H-ilt St.) 668-7622 Sunday worship 10 a.m. student supper 5 Wednesday 7 p.m. listening for God Fridays 7 p.m. Friday nite at movies John Rollefson and Donna Simon Campus Ministers UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL, LCMS 1511 Washtenaw, near Hill Sunday Worship 10:30 a.m. Pastor Ed Krauss, 663-5560 receive credit toward their degree pro- gram. In an attempt to make international students feel more at home, the party said it wants to educate campus groups about a wide variety of cultures that make up the University population and close the cultural barriers between stu- dents. Other issues the Students' Party is addressing in its platform include improving the CCRB facilities, get- ting involved in a budget study and working to develop an efficient way to recycle campaign fliers that are usually thrown away following MSA elections. Katz said she would like to assess who uses the CCRB and work with stu- dents and administration to decide on specific improvements. Although MSA members' actions are limited when it comes to major political issues, the party members said they would be excited to assist any stu- dent group in lobbying its local, state or federal government. LSA sophomore Mark Sherer, who is running for a second year, said he strongly supports the Chopp Karnik team. "I support the leaders of the Students' Party and the philosophy that we are interested in being stu- dents and serving students," Sherer said. By protecting students rights, devel- oping online lobbying, creating educa- tional forums on affirmative action and sweatshop issues, the Students' Party said it would like to help students devel- op their own opinions about world pol- itics. -Daily Staff Reporter Jewel Gopwani contributed to this report. READL. ANDs R'.cYCLE THE DAly. AROUND THE NATION Northwest defends handling of flights" WASHINGTON - Passengers were stuck for hours on airplanes parked ir. Detroit Metropolitan Airport runways during a January snowstorm because it Was unsafe to move them, Northwest Airlines executives told lawmakers yesterday at House hearing. "This was an unprecedented storm in Detroit, the worst storm in 25 years," sa Richard Hirst, Northwest's senior vice president of corporate affairs. "There we no vacant gates. "We correctly chose to stick with our zero-injury option of waiting for gates to become available," said Northwest pilot Joseph Gilroy, a passenger in one of the planes that landed at the Detroit Metro Airport the weekend of the storm Jan. 2 to 3. But, Hirst said Northwest employees could have communicated better with customers during the storm, and that the company made a mistake in deciding to bring more flights into the airport when it already was clogged with strand- ed aircraft. The monster storm brought Detroit Metropolitan Airport national attentiot when exhausted, angered passengers were stuck aboard planes stacked on runwj for up to eight hours. Northwest accounts for about three-quarters of all flights the airport. Supreme Court supports special ed. WASHINGTON - The school dis- trict in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, had already overspent its special education budget by $1 million when the Supreme Court ruled it had to pay for one-on-one nurs- ing for a student - adding $30,000 a year. Garret Frey, the 16-year-old sopho- more on a ventilator because of an acci- dent that left him paralyzed, isn't the issue, said Superintendent Lew Finch. The case is really about the federal government creating rules requiring schools to educate children with dis- abilities, but not sending enough money to ensure they can afford it. "If schools don't get more help, they may need to raise local taxes;' Finch said. "This might be the case that opens a lot of eyes." Special education is one of the most emotional issues schools face, and one of their fastest-growing costs. States have long fought with local schools and the Education Department about costs. Now Republicans and Democrats in Congress are debating how much the federal government should help. Nearly 6 million children receive special education instruction and ser- vices costing $60 billion, about $5 bil- lion of that from the federal govel ment. Union funds lose to tobacco industry WASHINGTON - The tobacco industry won a major victory yesterday when. an Ohio jury ruled against 114 union health funds seeking to recover millions of dollars spent to treat sick smokers - the first case of its kind to reach a jury verdict. . Industry lawyers hailed the verdict as a harbinger of things to come in similar cases filed around the nation by scores of union health funds. The verdict "shows that this attempt to say that these tobacco companies are evil conspirators ... is a phony piece of revisionist history," attor- ney Robert Weber said.The jury, he said, seqt plaintiffs a message that "no matter how you package this, we don't buy it For more information, contact C'&P at 3200 Student Activities Building Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1316 (734)764-7460 The University of M i an Career Planning t),avvn of Sludent Al Iu. Placement -. AROUND THEWORLD 4~ WerdSn u slOYEecuove display advertising department would like to thank all of the business who have donated merchendise over the past year. Albanians sign pact, Serbs boycott PARIS - With Yugoslav represen- tatives boycotting to demonstrate their opposition, ethnic Albanians signed a Western autonomy plan for Kosovo at a low-key ceremony yes- terday and then made plans to leave France at the conclusion of the unsuccessful peace talks. As the Clinton administration stepped up its warnings that NATO was prepared to launch airstrikes against Yugoslavia if it does not agree to the autonomy plan, Western medi- ators are expected to declare an end to the negotiations today after a week of fruitless efforts to win the' accep- tance of the Yugoslav-Serb delega- tion. According to diplomats close to the negotiations, Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic will be given a deadline of up to a week to accept the plan. They said Western envoys were prepared to travel to Belgrade to meet with him. Serbian President Milan Milutinovic, who is representing Miloscvic at the talks, remained defiant as the negotiations neared an end. "If they (NATO) attack us we are prepared to fight," Milutinovic said. "We ready to defend our country." Milutinovic ridiculed the signing ceremony and called the negotiations "a fraud." Mexico's ruling party to elect leader MEXICO CITY - Mexico's lon ruling Institutional Revolutionary P geared up yesterday to elect its leader for the first time, following the surprise resignation of its powerful chief. The outgoing leader, Mariano Palacios Alcocer, said the March 30 vote by a party council was aimed,°t increasing democracy within the party, known as the PRI. In the past, the Mexican president appointed the PkI's chief and its presidential candidate in i process known as the "dedazo," or big finger. - tCompiled from Daily wire reports. II F 7 5 r"r f M IIIII ~Color Copies:, I 1 i Only with Coupon; 8.5x31 a Dollar Bil C CO) P v I"N G 611 Church Street Ann Arbor, MI 48104 (734) 665-9200 " (fax) 930-2800 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-campus4 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.michigandaiy.com. EDITORIAL STAFF Heather Ka ins Editor in Chief NEWS Jennifer Yachnin, Managing Editor EDITORS: Nikita Easley, Erin Holmes, Katie Plona, Mike Spehn. STAFF: Janet Adamy, Angela Bardoni, Risa Berrin, Marta Brill, Nick Bunkley, Karn Chopra, Adam Brian Cohen, Gerard Cohen-Vrignaud. Nick Falzone; Lauren Gibbs, Robert Gold, Jewel Gopwani, Michael Grass, MarIa Hackett, Jody Simone Kay, Yael Kohen, Sarah Lewis, Chris - Metinko, Kelly O'Connor, Asma Rafeeq, Nika Schulte. Emina Sendijarevic, Tushar Sheth, Jason Stoffer, Avram S. Turkel, Jaimie Winkler. Adam Zuwerink. CALENDAR: Jewel Gopwani, Adam Zuwerink. EDITORIAL Jeffrey Kosseff, David Wallace, Edit ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Emily Achenbaum STAFF: Chip Cullen, Ryan DePietro, Jason Fink, Seth Fisher, Lea Frost, Scott Hunter, Thomas Kuljurgis, Sarah LeMire, Sarah Lockyer, Laurif Mayk, James Miller, Michael Nagrant, Steve Rosenberg, Scott Rothman, Branden Sanz, Killy Scheer. Jack Schillaci, Megan Schimpf. De*, Whitcup, Paul Wong, Nick Woomer. SPORTS Rick Freeman, Managing Editor EDITORS: TJ. Berka, Chris Duprey, Josh Kleinbaum, Andy Latack. Pranay Reddy. STAFF: Josh Borkin, Evan Braunstein, David Den Herder, Dan Dingerson, Jason Emeott. Jordan Field, Mark Francescutti, Geoff Gagnon, Raphael Goodstein, Chris Grandstaff, Rick Harpster, Michael Kern, Vaughn R. Kug, Chris Langrill. Ryan C. Moloney, Stephanie Offen. Sharat Raju, Jim Rose, Kevin Rosenfield, Tracy Sandier, Michael Shafnr, Mark Snyder Nita Srivastava, Uma Subramanian, Jacob Wheeler, Jon Zemke. ARTS Jessica Eaton, Christopher Tkaczyk, Editors WEEKEND. ETC. EDITORS: Aaron Rich, Will Weissert SUB-EDITORS: Gabe Faluri (Music). Chris Cousino (TV/Newmedia). Anna Kovalszki (Fine/Peforming Arts), Ed Sholinsky (Film), Corinne Schneider (Books) STAFF: Amy Barber. Matthew Barrett, Jenny Curren, Jimmy Draper, Jeff Druchniak. Cortney Dueweke, Brian Egan, Laura Flyer, Steve _ Gertz, Jenni Glenn, Jewel Gopwani, Caitlin Hall, Gina Hamadey, Garth Heutel. Sasha Higgins, Elizabeth Holden, Chns Kula, Bryan Lark, Kristin Long, Kelly Lutes. Ryan Malkin, Rob Mitchum, Andrew Mortensen, Kern Murphy, William Nash, Dikran Ornekian, Erin Podolsk Lauren Rice, Adlin Rosli, Ted Watts, Juquan Williams, Daniel Wolfman, Jonah Victor, Leah Zaiger. PHOTO Margaret Myers, Warren Zinn, Editors ARTS EDITOR: Adiana Yugovich ASSISTANT EDITORS: Louis Brown, Dana Unnane STAFF: Chris Campernell, Darby Friedlis, Kristin Goble, Dhani Jones, Jessica Johnson, Kelly McKinnell, David Rochkind, Nathan Ruffer, Sara Schenk. ONLINE Satadru Pramanik, Editor STAFF Toyin Akinmusuru. Seth Benson, Rachel Berger, Amy Chen, Todd Graham, Paul Wong. a. P.1'S RECORDS & USED CDS 617 Packard Upstairs from Subway Paying $4 to $6