2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 22, 2000 NATION/WORLD Clnton, Vajj NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Against the back- drop of new violence in disputed Kashmir, President Clinton and Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vaj- payee agreed yesterday to closer economic ties and warmer relations between the world's two largest democracies. "We have neglected this relationship for two decades," Clinton said at a joint news conference. But the session, as expected, did not produce a breakthrough on the two issues the United States was pressing for the hardest: A backing away by India from its nuclear weapons program and renewal of a peace dialogue between India and Pakistan. payee condemn violence Both Clinton and Vajpayee voiced outrage at fresh bloodshed in Kashmir. "The violence must end ... There should be less violence in Kashmir, not more," Clinton said. And Vajpayee, somewhat ominously, said, "We have the will and the means to eliminate this menace." Pressed by reporters, Vajpayee declined to elaborate. The first visit of a U.S. president in 22 years came as gunmen massacred 36 Sikhs in Kashmir, the terri- tory claimed by both India and Pakistan. Indian army officers had said earlier they expected a major opera- tion by pro-separatist militants to draw attention to Kashmir during the president's visit. Clinton, who earlier in the day had scattered roses on the memorial to Mohandas Gandhi, the Indian apostle to nonviolence, renewed his plea for India and Pakistan to restart the peace process. He said he doubted that a military solution existed to resolve the Kashmir problem and urged respect by both sides for the "line of control," the line through Kashmir that separates the two sides. On nuclear issues, Clinton said, "I felt today that there was a possibility that we could reach more common ground on the issue of testing, on the pro- duction of fissile material, on export controls and on restraint generally." VOTING Continued from Page 1 and they didn't vote, they can immedi- ately realize someone voted for them and go to election officials," Agrawal said. ITD "can look up where the false vote was done and remove it and let the voter revote," he said. Confirmation e-mails are not new to MSA elections, but this is the first year election officials can find out who cast false votes. This new feature allows election officials to see who voted for which candidates, but only if there is cause for suspicion of a fraudulent vote. Other students said no matter what voting options are available, they will not.be voicing their vote. "I don't think MSA has any power to act on this campus," said Jason Burr, an Engineering sophomore. "I think that abstaining from voting is" a good form of protest of this lack of power. Last winter's MSA elections boasted a record turnout of 18 percent of the student population or approximately 6,380 votes. Only a small portion of P 1 Michigan's Premier Multi-Tap Voted: Best Bar for Lunch Best Top Shelf Best Liquor Selection Best Beer Selection Best Cocktail Lounge by the Metro Times 65 Beers on Tap! Over 60 Premium Whiskies! those votes were cast at paper polling sites. With elections beginning today and new elected members scheduled to take office next Tuesday, outgoing MSA representatives have many words of advice and warning for the candi- dates eager to take over the soon-to- be-vacant positions. "Don't take yourself too seriously," Kinesiology Rep. Joe Tobias said. "MSA reps can get kind of annoying when they take themselves too serious- "You really have to care what's going on at the University," Tobias HOLOCAUST Continued from Page 1 a bill to aid the situation, he met opposition by the State Department, which would only allow 10,000 Jew- ish children refugees and 10,000 non-Jewish children to be rescued and brought to families in the Unit- ed States. As a result, he pulled the Wagner-Rogers Bill out because he had hoped to aid more Jews than the Frustrated and disappointed with the University? Need help making sense of your U of M experience? Check out http://universitysecrets.com 338 S. State Street 734-996-9191 www.ashleys.com a said. "Your decisions impact what's going on. But Nursing School senior Jen Sea- mon advises that soon-to-be MSA rep- resentatives should run for office for the right reasons. "Be a rep. because you actually care about your school, not just for a law school resume," she said. Seamon also emphasized the impor- tance of having "open ears to con- stituents." Tobias warned that representatives need to not be too naive. "People beg for money and lie straight to your face' he said. State Department would allow. "There were at 8,000 Jewish chil- dren waiting in Vischy, France who would have been saved by this bill,"he said. Fine also said poor media coverage prevented U.S. involvement because Americans were not informed as to what was happening in Europe. "There was plenty of information about the Holocaust, but it wasn't played up by the press," he said. Any stories that did make it into the newspaper were in "the inside pages,' and filled with disclaimers, Fine said. Included in the statistics Fine described is a poll taken in 1938, stating that 61 percent of Americans felt that "the persecution of the Jews was entire- ly or partly the fault of the Jews." Another statistic, taken in December of 1942, revealed that 47 percent of Americans felt that "Anti-Semitism was justified:' Ann Arbor resident Barbara Rosen said she "came because a lot of us don't know about what happened in America during the Holocaust. We wonder why America didn't do any- thing." The 21st Annual Conference on the Holocaust will conclude tomor- row with a panel discussion also focusing on the role of America dur- ing the Holocaust. The panel will include U.S. Foreign Correspondent in Europe during World War II Ruth Gruber, Prof. Leonard Dinnerstein from the University of Arizona, Chief of Investigative Research in the U.S. Justice Department's Office of Special Investigation Michael MacQueen and University Prof. Todd Endelman. The Panel discussion will focus on "the role of America during the Holo- caust and its later implications in America and on the consciousness of American Jews," according to a writ- ten statement from Hillel. "We hope to educate people who attend about the Holocaust and its repercussions on people," Hillel Program Associate Megan Nesbitt said. To Honor Women's History Month The Michigan Union, Pierpont Commons and Michigan League present ?IIJhWi -1 Former newspaper columnist for the Boston Globe, she authored the companion volume to the "Africans In America" PBS TV series. She is a four-time national performance poet champion and winner of the Carl Sandburg prize for poetry. She has published 3 books of poetry and her work has appeared in "The Paris Review", "TriQuarterly", and many literary journals. She now writes a monthly column for MS. magazine. Tuesday March 28, 2000 A presentation @ 12:00 PM in the Boulevard Room of Pierpont Commons on- "Performance- Delivering the Word from off the Page at the Stage" A Feature Literary Performance- 8:00 PM in the U-Club of the Michigan Union Free and Open to the Public For More Information Contact Robb Thibault Michigan Union Arts & Programs Phone- 763-3202 or Email- rthibaul@umich.edu ACROSS THE NATION Court: FDA can't regulate tobacco WASHINGTON - The government lacks authority to regulate tobacco as an addictive drug even though tobacco use may be "the single most significant threat to public health," the Supreme Court said yesterday, throwing out the Clin- ton administration's main anti-smoking initiative. The 5-4 ruling said Congress did not authorize the Food and Drug Adminis- tration to regulate tobacco. President Clinton and others immediately said Con- gress should pass a law letting the FDA reinstate its rules cracking down cigarette sales to minors. "If we are to protect our children from the harms of tobacco, Congress must now enact the provisions of the FDA rule,' Clinton said in a statement issued while he was traveling in India. But Mark Smith, spokesman for Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., wel- comed the ruling. "Business and industry throughout the nation ought to breathe a sigh of relief. The highest court in the land has confirmed that a federal agency cannot on its own go beyond its limits of authority set by Congress," he said.' Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, writing for the court, said, "By no means d we question the seriousness of the problem that the FDA has sought to address:' She said, "The agency has amply demonstrated that tobacco use, particularly among children and adolescents, poses perhaps the single most significant threat to- lic health in the United States." 22 Dems seek Committee. The $300 million package would better gun control add 500 new inspectors and agrs to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacc and WASHINGTON - Democratic Firearms, and hire 1,000 local prose- lawmakers yesterday offered legislation cutors and 100 federal prosecutors to they say would bolster enforcement of handle gun law enforcement. gun laws by hiring new federal agents and prosecutors and creating a national Judge dismisses suit database of "ballistic fingerprints. . The package of bills dubbed to give boy asylum ENFORCE is based partly on propos- als President Clinton advanced in his MIAMI - A federal judge yes- State of the Union address in January. terday refused to block the U.S. It also was presented as an answer to government from sending 6-year- the National Rifle Association's fre- old Elian Gonzalez back to his quent argument that if enforcement of father in Cuba, saying the court existing gun laws improved, new laws has no right to second-guess the would not be needed. attorney general on matters of asy- "This bill puts the NRA's sincerity lum. to the test," said Sen. Charles Twelve days after hearing argu- Schumer (D-N.Y.). ments in the case, U.S. District Judge Schumer, author of the Brady bill K. Michael Moore dismissed the law- requiring background checks for gun suit filed by Elian's great-uncle in purchasers, was joined by Rep. Carolyn Miami. McCarthy, a New York Democrat The judge said that "each passing whose husband was killed by a gunman day is another day lost between Juan on a Long Island commuter train, and Gonzalez and his son" Elian's Miami Rep. John Conyers of Detroit, the rank- relatives said they will appeal the ing Democrat on the House Judiciary decision. Pope embarks on tual one, has unavoidable political sig- nificance. Among other issues is first visit to Israel Jerusalem's future: The Palestinians want to make the city's eastern sector JERUSALEM - In a spiritual cli- the capital of an eventual Palestinian max to his 22-year papacy, Pope John state. Paul I yesterday began the first offi- With a flourish of trumpets, John Paul cial visit by a Roman Catholic pontiff arrived at Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion Air- to Israel, fulfilling his dream of visit- port, then moved on to Jerusalem, where ing the land where Christ was born he will retrace the footsteps of Jesus. and died. n 1 The pilgrimage caps the ailing 79- DahamaS whl e year-old pope's efforts to reconcile deaths spark debate Catholics and Jews. But he got a 5 quick and sharp reminder of his dif- FREEPORT, Bahamas - Eight ferences with Israel over Jerusalem, whales beached and died soon a r which the Jewish state insists is its the U.S. Navy conducted anti-sub- undivided capital. rine exercises off the northern Within minutes of John Paul's Bahamas, prompting an investigation arrival, Israeli President Ezer Weiz- and calls for an end to the exercises man described Jerusalem as a city that The Navy said yesterday that tyre "has been reunified" - a reference to was no evidence to link the wiale Israel's capture of the mainly Arab deaths to last week's exercise testing eastern sector in the 1967 Middle East sonar detection of submarines. war. The Vatican has called Israel's Navy Cmdr. Greg Smith said the occupation of east Jerusalem "illegal." tests took place from about 1 p.m. to 5 Weizman's speech was a clear sig- p.m. March 15 off Abaco Island. nal that the pope's journey, though billed as a mainly personal and spin- - Compiledfron Daily wire rep* . 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 $100. Winter term (January through April) is $105, yearlong (September through April) is $180. On-campus subscriptions 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. 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