2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 13, 1999 NATION/WORLD Test ban treaty vote may be in 2001 WASHINGTON (AP) - Hopelessly outnumbered Senate supporters of a global ban on nuclear testing moved closer to a deal with Republican leaders yes- terday for a face-saving postponement of a planned vote. An apparent breakthrough came as Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle said he was ready to pledge - in writing and in statements on the Senate floor - not to press for a vote on the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty until after a new president and a new Congress take office in 2001. Trent Lott tentatively agreed to the arrangement but was working out details with other GOP foes of the treaty, those involved in the process said. Republicans had wanted President Clinton him- self to make the pledge not to try to bring up the treaty in the presidential election season. But Daschle's offer to do it in his stead appeared to be winning favor. Under the proposed compromise, Lott would make a motion for the Senate to return the treaty to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, a motion requiring a simple 51-vote majority, said GOP and Democratic aides, speaking on the condition of anonymity. "Everybody's looking for a peaceful exit," Sen. Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn.) said. However, not all Republicans indicated they would support such a move. Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) chair of the Foreign Relations Committee and an ardent foe of the treaty, told reporters he hadn't heard of any deal as of late yesterday afternoon "and if you hear about one, let me know." Earlier, Republican leaders dashed cold water on one Democratic strategy as efforts were advancing on other fronts to come up with a graceful way for the Senate to move away from outright rejection of the treaty. A "no" vote would be a humiliating defeat for Clinton, the first world leader to sign the pact in 1996. The treaty would ban all nuclear test explosions, extending an existing ban on atmospheric testing to underground tests as well. Lott, meanwhile, said that in the absence of a deal, he was ready to go ahead with a final vote. "I'm perfectly comfortable having a vote. This treaty is fatally flawed,' Lott said. White House spokesperson Joe Lockhart said Clinton had gone as far as he could - and wouldn't pledge in writing not to try to revive the issue next year. The treaty has been signed by 154 nations, but rati- fied by only 25 of the 44 countries with nuclear capa- bilities. All nuclear-capable states must ratify the pact before it can take effect. Republican Senate leaders held up the treaty for two years before suddenly scheduling this week's vote. Clearly lacking the 67 votes needed for ratification, Democrats were poised to try a procedural maneuver designed to force the Senate to move on to other issues. Such a motion would require only 51 votes, an eas- ier target for the chamber's 45 Democrats, But Lott signaled he would view such a move as a precedent- setting effort to usurp the calendar-setting preroga- tives of the majority party. At a party caucus, (GOP senators -even those who had been seeking a delay in the vote - agreed to sup- port Lott and oppose any such Democratic efforts. Moving on a separate track was an effort by two of the Senate's most influential senior members, Republican John Warner of Virginia and Democrat Daniel Patrick Moynihan of New York, to rally sup- port for a delay. A3D THE NATION Gore, Bradley agree to March debate WASHINGTON -- Presidential candidates Vice President Al Gore and Bill Bradley have agreed to appear in a nationally televised debate jointly sponsored by the Los Angeles Times and CNN less than a week before crit- ical primaries in early March. The 90-minute debate is to be held at The Times' office in downtown Los Angeles on March 1, 2000, and broadcast live on CNN; six days la* Democratic voters will go to the polls in California, New York, Ohio and at least 13 other states in the single largest day on the primary calendar. In a letter earlier this month to the Gore campaign, Bradley campaign chair Douglas Berman listed the Times/CNN debate as one of three in which the candidate has agreed to participate. Gore's campaign - which lately has pressed Bradley to hold debates weekly beginning this fall -- then said he would participate as well. "We will be there," said one senior Gore aide. The Times and CNN also are attempting to set up a comparable debate among the Republican presidential contenders for March 2. The GOP con- test currently features eight candidates. California is looming as a pivotal - and potentially decisive - con* in the Democratic race. MAR KERT Continued from Page 1 co-chair of the Developmental Biology Interdisciplinary Cluster for President Gerald Ford's Biomedical Research Panel in 1975. He also was elected pres- ident of many prestigious biological associations, including the American Institute of Biological Sciences and the Society for Developmental Biology. Prior to these activities, Markert served as the chair of the biology department at Yale University from 1965 to 1971. In 1991, the Academic Freedom Lecture Fund organized a series of annu- al lectures at the University to honor Markert, Davis and Nickerson. The University has held the lecture series, "The Davis, Markert, Nickerson Lecture on Academic and Intellectual Freedom" for the past nine years. Peggie Hollingsworth, who helped to organize the series, also feels Markert should be remembered for his academic achievements. "He was an outstanding man. He had a brilliant career in spite of the unfortunate incidents surrounding his alleged politi- cal views," Hollingsworth said. "I would like him to be remembered as a scholar," she continued, "as a man who cared about society and who contributed to making the world a better place." GHB Continued from Page 1 "We have seen more cases ofGlHfB in the last year than we have in the last several years," Gomez said. Originally, GHB was used by weight lifters to build muscle mass, but once its dangerous side effects were known, it was pulled off shelves, One medical research firm in Minnesota is studying the benefits of GHB for treating nar- colepsy. Stupak said the legislation includes a provision that allows the firm to contin- ue researching the drug, which quieted the bill's primary opposition. The two main ingredients of GHB are GBL, or gamma butyrolactone, and lye, the corrosive element in liquid drain cleaners. "GHB is very easy to make," said Felix Adatsi, supervisor of the state police toxicology unit, who testified at a hearing Upton hosted. in March. "Anyone surfing the Net can have all the information they need to make GHB." The Website of Biogenesis Laboratories offers GilB for sale at the price of $48 for 25 grams - more than double a potentially lethal dosage. EARN 1 O.OO$20.OOhr Do you have a car? IDeve, . DrverCs Jimmy John'SI We want the best ana we ap te Nest r Apply at 600 Packard St. Call 741-9200 Ask for Todd or Brad! Or 929 E. Ann St. Call 913-9200 Ask for Dan or Mike! I "Once the drug is taken, it has a very quick onset" Adatsi said. As little as two to three table- spoons of fresh GHB can cause blackouts within 15 minutes, he explained. Food and Drug Administration spokesperson Laura Bradbard said the FDA supports a federal crack-down on GHB. "If it becomes a controlled sub- stance, the FDA will have an easier job pulling these people in that are market- ing it," Bradbard said. GHB has been implicated in dozens of deaths nationwide, including several in Michigan. In January, 15-year-old Samantha Reid of Grosse Ile died from a GHB overdose after unknowingly ingesting the drug in her drink at a party. "Michigan has had a disproportion- ate number of instances, it seems," Woodruff said. Toxicology reports revealed alcohol and traces of GHB in Courtney Cantor's body following the University student's fatal fall from her sixth-floor Mary Markley Residence Hall window last October. Several Lake City, Mich., teenagers were hospitalized in July after lapsing into GHB-induced comas. RECOGNITION Continued from Page 1. existing faculty and their vibrant research," Uher said, referring to donors giving money to the University. Associate Provost Paul Courant said "this shows that we are the kind of University where people can do the best work in the world; it's been a long time coming" Some hope the attention brought to the University by such an honor may increase its recognition. "Part of the representation is the quality of the people who work here. This recognition is testimony to the University so it brings pride," said Vice President for Research Fawwaz Ulaby. The University community, espe- cially the physics department, looks forward to working with more potential candidates, Uher said. "This will attract better quality and high class professors to positions and impact very positively on our university," he said. -. Daily St f Reporter Nka Schulte contributed to this report. NOBEL PRIZE Continued from Page 1. strong graduate and undergraduate population," Uher said. Veltman had an "attitude of the utmost scientific standards and rigors, which he injected into his students,; Uher said. During his 16-year stay at the University, Veltman graduated five doctoral students. "Veltman can work effectively and get his ideas listened to," said physics Prof. Jens Zorn. Long-time friend and colleague Ratin Akhoury said "this piece of work is absolutely very fundamen- tal, and eventually many people will recognize Veltman because of this award." The opportunity to work with Veltman "gave us great insight into what the correct directions in physics are. We all tried to learn from him," said Akhoury, who is also a physics professor at the University. University President Lee Bollinger also expressed his regards toward Veltman for his accomplishments. "This is an extraordinary moment Complete journals to be published NEW YORK-- One of literature's 'reat underground documents is com- ing to bookstores: the complete jour- nals of Sylvi Plath. For decades, readers have obsessed like conspiracy theorists about Plath, the poet and novelist who killed herself in 1963. Biographers continue to analyze everything from her work to her fatmously difficult marriage to fellow poet Ted Hughes. Their relationship has lived on in Plath's posthumously issued poems and letters and in Hughes' "Birthday Poems," pub- lished iust months before he died in 1998. The exact nature of their relation- ship and why she committed suicide is still debated: The journals may offer clues. An edition published in the 1980s is believed to contain only one- third of the collection. The new book will almost certainly add hundreds of previously unpublished pages. 'IMMO TH WORLD ............ .. I..- Barak may uproot West Bank settlers JERUSALEM - Embarking on a con frontation course with the influen- tial Jewish settler movement, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak told set- tlement leaders yesterday that more than a dozen outposts that have sprouted on the West Bank in the last year will be dismantled. The dcision to uproot 15 of 42 new settlements, some of which consist only of a trailer home or two on an isolated hilltop, had been broadly hinted this week in comments by Barak and other top officials. It marks an unusual defeat for the settler movement, which has enjoyed the support of numerous Israeli governments. "This decision breaks the relationship we had with the prime minister and with his government," Yehoshua Mor-Yossef, a spokesperson for the settlers' umbrella council, said after Barak met with the group late yesterday. "We thought he would change his mind." The settlers vowed to protest the decision, but it was not immediately clear whether they would physically resist the closures. If they are forcibly evacuated by police or soldiers, it will increase the political risk consider*, for Barak, whose governing coalition includes settlement representatives and supporters. Annan welcomes 6 billionth child UNITED NATIONS -A population clock at U.N. headquarters hit 6.billn yesterday and started racing towat l billion as an anxious world pondered what the new millennium holds for an increasingly crowded planet. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan welcomed the symbolic Baby 6 Billion in Sarajevo, Bosnia- Herzegovina - a boy born to refugee parents in a region returning to life after a decade of war. - Compiledf om Daily wire reps. "The decision has been made to publish them in their entirety, unedited, so the world can judge for themselves," said Joanna Mackle, publishing .direc- tor for London-based Faber and Faber, which in April will issue the book in Britain. A U.S. publisher is expectedit be announced shortly. Car owners get a taste of Y2K glitches PORTLAND, Maine -State govern- ment got its first Y2K surprise months early when owners of 2000 model cars and trucks received titles identifying their new vehicles as "horseless car- riages." Desoite millions of dollars spen ensure state computers are ready for the year 2000, computers in the sec- retary of state's office got confused over the 2000 model year designa- tion. As a result, some new vehicle owners or lien holders got titles to "horseless carriages" instead of cars or trucks in April. "YES, I LOVEYOUR SATIN UNDIES, BUT I'M GOING BACKTO MY ROOM TO CHECK MY EMAIL' 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 fal 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 Micnigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St, Ann Arbor, Michigan 4 094327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; ports 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.et ters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://www.michigandaily.com. NEWS Jennifer Yachnin, Managing Editor EDITORS: Nikita Easley, Katie Plona. Mike Spahn, Jaimie Winkler. STAFF: Lindsey Alpert, Jeannie Baumann. Risa Berrin. Marta Brill. Nick Bunkley, Anna Clark, Adam Brian Cohen, Gerard Cohen-Vrignaud, Shabnam Daneshvar, Sana Danish. Dave Enders, Anand Giridharadas, Robert Gold, Jewel Gopwani, Michael Grass, Jodie Kaufman, Jody Simone Kay, Yael Kohen, Lisa KoIVu, Dan Krauth, Sarah Lewis, Hanna LoPatin, Kevin Magnuson, Caitlin Nish, Kelly O'Connor, Jeremy W. Peters. Asma Rafeeq, Nika Schulte, Calie Scott, Emina Sendijarevic, Jennifer Sterling, Samantha Walsh. CALENDAR: Adam Zuwerink. EDITORIAL Jeffrey Kosseff, David Wailace, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Emily Achenbaum, Nick Woomer. EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Ryan DePietro. STAFF Chip Cullen Seth Fisher, Lea Frost. Jenna Greditor, Scott Hunter. Kyle Goodridge, Molly Kennedy, Thomas Kuljurgis, Mike tO George Mak, Steve Rosenberg, Branden Sanz, Killy Scheer, Jack Schillaci, Jeu Singer, Jennifer Strausz, MarIon Weiss, Josh Wickerham, Paul Wong SPORTS Rick Freeman, Managing Editor EDITORS: T.J. Berka. Chris Dsprey, Josh Keinbaum, Andy Latack. STAFF: Emily Achenbasm.Matt Barbas, David Den Herder, Sam Duwe. Dan Dingerson, Jason Emeot, Mark Francescutti, Geoff Gagnon, Raphael Goodstein, Arun Gopal. Chris Grandstaff. David Horn. Michael Kem, Dena Krischer, Ryan C. Moloney, David Mosse, Stephanie Offen, Kevin Rosenfield. David Roth, Tracy Sandier, Nita Srivastava, Uma Subramanian, Jacob Wheeler. Jon Zemke. ARTS Christopher Cousino, Jessica Eaton, Editors WEEKEND ETC. EDITORS: Jeff Druchniak, Nicole Pearl, Toyin Akinmusuru SUB-EDITORS: Gabe Fajun (Music). Jenni Glenn (Fine/Peforming Arts). Cartlin Hall (TV/New Media), Gina Hamadey (Books), Ed Sholinsky (Film) STAFF: Matthew Barrett, Jason Birchmeier. Alisa Claeys, Cortney Dueweke, Brian Egan, Steven Gertz, Jewel Gopwani. Chris Kula. Erin Po'olsky, Aaron Rich. Adlin Rosli, Chris Tkaczyk, Jonah Victor, Ted Watts, John Uhl, Curtis Zimmerman. PHOTO Louis Brown, Dana Linnane, Ed ASSOCIATEEDITOR:David Rochkind ARTS EDITOR: Jessica Johnson STAFF: Allison Cantor, Sam Hollenshead, Dhani Jones, Danny Kaick. David Katz, Mariorie Marshall, Jeremy MenchikJoanna Paine, Sara Schenk. Michelle Sweinis, Kimtsu Yogachi. ONLINE Satadru Pramanik, Managing Editor EDITORS: Toyn Akmnmusuru, Rachel Berger, Paul Wong STAFF: Amy Ament, Angela Cummings, Dana Goldberg, James Schiff, Peter Zhou. DESIGNER: Seth Benson 'I: 0, 01