2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 10, 2000 NATION/WORLD TICKETS Continued from Page 1. season the Wolverines won a national championship. Complaints from students and alumni caused Uni- versity President Lee Bollinger and former Athletic Director Tom Goss to promise that would never hap- pen again, and all University students received full- season tickets the following season. The administration kept its promise and gave all students full-season tickets, but Roundtable mem- bers thought students were still taking a back seat to the general public when it came to athletic tickets. Even though all students received full season tick- ets, they were being dispersed around the stadium, forcing some to sit outside the designated student "We were told that students were the first priority but when push came to shove, the first priority was going to people who paid full price for tickets," Elias said. Bodnar said that of the 22,000 student tickets, 20,776 will be in the student section which spans sections 25 to 32. The other tickets will be mixed in with the general public. Elias said another concern addressed at the discus- sion was the priority of students in receiving the tick- ets. Bodnar said priority will now be given to under- graduate and returning graduate students on the Uni- versity's Ann Arbor campus. Next on the list will be first-year graduate students and students at the Flint and Dearborn campuses. If 22,000 tickets is not enough to fill the student demand, students from the lower priority groups will be the first ones to receive full refunds instead of their full-season tickets. But if the demand for student tickets is less than 22,000, the extra tickets will be available to the gen- eral public. Bodnar said this is to ensure that the number of tickets allotted for students will remain stable at 22,000 for future seasons. Bodnar said 22,000 tickets should be adequate to meet demand, but a final determination will not be made until after all the applications are received. Stu- dent applications for this fall were sent out this week. "I don't know how much of the conversation had an impact,' Elias said of the Roundtable discussion. "But at least we knew that the athletic department listened to us. I think at some level we affected the change." ACROSS THE NATION CI, I Senate confirms Paez, Berzon as judges WASHINGTON - The Senate confirmed Richard Paez and Marsha Berzon as federal appellate judges yesterday, ending years of bitter debate over whether they were too liberal and whether women and minority nominees have more dif- ficulty winning Senate approval. Vice President Al Gore, interrupting his presidential campaign schedule, made a rare appearance in the Senate to be ready to cast a vote, in his capacity president of the Senate, in case of a tie. That wasn't needed as first Berzon, by a vote of 64-34, and later Paez, by 59-39, were confirmed as judges on the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals. Gore celebrated the confirmations by saying, in Spanish, "Friends, today we've finally achieved justice." "We've seen a troubling pattern of the Republican Party standing against qual- ified judicial nominees who happen to be women and minorities," he said at a news conference. Paez is Mexican-American and was strongly supported by Hispanic groups. President Clinton also referred to the nominees' diverse backgrounds in h ing the votes at the end of a White House meeting with religious leaders: think maybe we're, by fits and starts, moving toward our one America." section. WAGE Continued from Page 1 Shows viewed the tax cut as a necessi- ty and estimated the current bill to be a better use of the surplus than the 5800 billion dollar tax cut proposed by Republicans last year, Strider said. But, Strider said, Shows voted for the two-year increase plan along with other Democrats. Ted Lapkin, spokesman for Rep. Rick Lazio (R-N.Y.), who sponsored the pro- posal, said Republicans tried to "craft a bill that reflects the concerns of both sides of the aisle in the House that on one hand recognizes the need to raise the minimum wage but on the other hand the needs of small businesses." Welday echoed this analysis of the bill. "Small businesses will have the same benefits that larger corporations have had," he said. Had the Democratic amendment failed to pass, Clarke said, President Clinton had pledged to veto any legis- lation that would take more than two years to raise the minimum wage. Michigan Democrats to caucus across the state CAUCUS Continued from Page 1 admitted beginning at 10 a.m. and must be registered by Itl a.m. Regis- tered voters must also show proof that they are in their designated caucus zone to vote. Voters must be regis- tered as Democrats or be prepared to declare themselves a Democrat at the caucus site. Local representatives from Gore and Bradley campaigns are expected to be present at the Union caucus site to represent the candidates. Stu- dents for Gore co-Chairman Michael Masters will be the representative for Gore. Bradley officials have not contact- ed the caucus site managers to name a representative, Democrats who voted in the Michigan Republican primary last month "can still vote in the caucus but their vote could be subject to a challenge," Denno said. It is a violation of state Democrat- ic Party rules for those who voted in the Republican primary to also vote in the caucus, Denno said. Although Bradley has announced he will not seek the presidential nomination, he has not given up the delegates he has already won and still has the opportunity to win even more in Michigan. The possibility of giving Bradley more delegates may draw some stu- dents to caucus sites tomorrow, said Students for Bradley co-Chairwoman Amanda Beaumont, an LSA senior. "A lot of people are dissatisfied with the vice president and they want to make their dissatisfaction heard at the convention," Beaumont said. "I think (Bradley supporters) may turn out anyway just to support his policy positions," said Jane Michener, a manager at the Union caucus site. Gunman's motives probed in rampage MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Memphis was a city in mourning yesterday - flags were at half-staff, bouquets of flowers were placed on fire hall steps, and firefighters and law officers wore black bands across their badges. All were in memory of two fire- fighters and a sheriff's deputy who were slain Wednesday - allegedly by one of their comrades, firefighter Fred Williams - in a rampage that has angered and saddened this Mississippi River city, "It's just so shocking," said Pam McFarlin, who took food to firefight- ers at Fire Station No. 55 and brought a bouquet of flowers to the home where the men were shot. "We all just feel so bad." Williams ambushed the firefighters as they arrived to fight a blaze at his home, authorities said. Williams' wife, Stacey, was found shot to death in the garage. Investigators said they were still looking for a motive. They were trying to determine whether Williams set the fire to lure firefighters to the home, or to cover up his wife's death. It was also unclear whether Williams made the 911 call to report the fire, Police Director Wal- ter Crews said. Texas prison faces shortage of guards HUNTSVILLE, Texas - After 4 1/2 weeks of training, the 103 rookie officers are within days of heading into an environment of danger and violence in the nation's second-largest prison system. They will join 27,300 securi officers in a 151,000-inmate syste that is operating about 2,000 guards short. The shortage has been attributed to rapid expansion of the prison system, low pay, a booming economy that. makes the prospect of spending the day guarding convicts less attractive, and the risks of dealing with inmates who seem to be getting meaner and more violent. The 9th Annual JXsPXN CULTLJKX L FS X Sunday, March 12th 11 am-5pm Michigan Union Ballroom Admission: FREE } Events include: Tea Ceremony, Nihon Buyo Dance, Kimono, Origami, Calfigraphy, Japanese Animation, Traditional Toys,' Technology & Games, Sumo Suits, Japanese PopConcert, Karate, and Kendo. Please come and check it out! JCF website: www.umich.edu/-nihon AROUND THE WORLD I I ~'' '' t. i ::z U *aK St Female fighters push on for Tamil victory ARASADITHIVU, Sri Lanka - In a land where women are prized for their quiet passivity, one of the world's most ruthless guerrilla groups is rid- ing toward victory on the strength of its female fighters. Women of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, rebels waging a war for an independent homeland in this island nation, are emerging as the movement's most important weapon after thousands of men have died in battle. With vials of cyanide hanging from their necks, women Tigers are shoot- ing their way into government bunkers and police stations. They are hacking to death men, women and babies. Women Tigers are wrapping their bodies with explosives and killing dozens in suicide attacks. As the men fall, the women fighters are stepping into the upper ranks of a guerrilla army once reserved exclusively for men. Seetha, a 22-year-old leader of 1,500 women fighters, stands just over 5 feet tall, wears her hair neatly trimmed and says she might one day like to have a family. Dressed in camouflage fatigues and toting a machine gun, she tal with the cool confidence of a batt hardened commander. Fire kills 18 girls at Tuvalu high school SUVA, Fiji - Fire swept through a locked dormitory at a high school in the South Pacific nation of Tuvalu last night, killing 18 teen-age girls and- their supervisor, a governm* spokesman said. The fire was believed to have been caused by a student's candle that top- pled over in the girls' dormitory at the Motufoua Secondary School. The dorm was an old wooden building whose door had been fastened shut and whose open windows were cov- ered in wire mesh. The girls, ranging between 14- and 17-years-old, were locked inside their rooms. - Compiled from Daily wire reports it's time. 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Danri a oiwnina Hiischman, V noV $10, Peter ZIrPij. DESIGNER: Sethri ijnsoni CONSULITANT: Satadru, Pramanik 11 .... I Nnv\I hiring fcw Now hirinsa for II - I