2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 1, 199914ATION/XORLD - Clinton looks to Oslo for peace legacy WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton hopes his quick trip to Oslo, Norway, could begin a final push toward earning a place in history as an honored peacemaker. Clinton has picked an agreement between Israel and the Arabs as his top foreign policy priority. It also could be his best chance for a shining legacy. Israel and the Palestinians have given themselves until September to conclude an overall settlement. On Friday they decided to get started Nov. 7. That schedule coincides with the winding down of Clinton's second term. He has nearly 15 months left in office, time enough for the president to play the role of prodder or dealmaker. At this point, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak and Palesinian leader Yasser Arafat are willing to try on their own. But if they get hung up on the tough issues, Clinton is just a telephone call away. "We will be central to the peace process not only because the parties want us to be, but because it is a strategic interest of the United States," Sandy Berger, Clinton's national security adviser, said in a recent speech. Clinton is ready after the rigorous training exercise in last year's successful West Bank diploma- cy in rural Maryland. At the beginning, in 1993, Clinton focused on domestic issues such as the economy and health care, and was slow to get to foreign policy. When he did concentrate on the outside world, the most pressing matters were conflict in the Balkans, the search for illegal weapons in Iraq and the need to set a course for dealing with Russia and China. He also made some bold strokes to settle the Northern Ireland problem. An agreement he nurtured, while tenuous, essentially is holding. At this point, though, with the Monica Lewinskv scandal receding and peace prospects in the Middle East more promising than ever, Clinton has his sights on an overall settlement between Israel and the Arabs as a final act. He was flying to Oslo yesterday with limited expec- tations on what will be a brief fling at Middle East diplomacy. AROUND THE NATION Airborne laser, future role in defense SEATTLE - Across the street from a museum depicting the Wright brothers' historic flights at Kitty Hawk, N.C., nearly 100 years ago, a new breed of aviation pioneer is chasing a 21st Century dream: an airplane armed with speed-of-light weaponry that can destroy enemy missiles in flight. The airborne laser is a little known but potentially important part of a fu defense against missile attack. The work being done at Boeing Co.'s developn center is part of an effort to leap ahead of the traditional approach to missile defense. Critics and doubters say it may be an expensive flop like many other attempted innovations in missile defense during the past two decades. The Clinton administration is developing two kinds of missile defense systems, both possibly using laser weapons: - Relying on the airborne laser to help provide protection against missile attack on U.S. and allied troops abroad. - Protecting the U.S. homeland, first by shooting down missiles with othermis- siles and later, perhaps, with laser weapons orbiting in outer space. Air Force Gen. Michael Ryan sees a bright future for airborne lasers. "We think we've got all the physics about right," he said recently. "Now we to see if we can engineer it onto the (airplane) and shoot it. That's the next test. could be a revolutionary kind of capability." TELEMARKET Continued from Page 1A "I've never ever received this type of response,' he said. With his legislation still early in the drafting stage, Goschka said he also is considering including provisions requir- ing telemarketers' phone numbers to appear on Caller ID devices and allowing Michigan residents to put their names on a list that would prohibit any unsolicited calls to their homes. According to the Michigan Public Service Commission, it is illegal for tele- marketers to call people who have asked to be added to the company's "do not call" list for the next 10 years, but non- profit organizations are not required to maintain such lists. Telemarketers also are required by law to announce the company's name and what they are selling at the beginning of a call and are prohibited from tying up a phone line with autodialed or prerecord- ed messages. To reduce telemarketing calls, the MPSC recommends contacting the Consumer Protection Division of the Michigan Attorney General's Office or the Federal Communications Commission's Consumer Complaints department. MIRT Continued from Page 1A ferences were the most interesting and valuable parts of the program. "I liked having the opportunity to see several other countries," said Stacie Smith, a second-year public health stu- dent. "It expanded the world for me." Barker studied obesity among adolescent boys in Santiago, Chile. "Some of the boys acted strangely toward me partly because I was a girl and partly because I was African- American," said Barker. "There are virtual- ly no people of color in Chile." LSA senior Kourtney Cockrell said about her research in South Africa, "It made you realize the disproportion between South Africa and America. "In America you're black and then you're an American - in South Africa you're an American and then you're black;' she said. Ixsy Ramirez, an LSA senior, said she participated in MIRT to increase research on Latino/a issues. "When I was doing journal readings before I left, I couldn't find articles that related to Latino fami- lies and Latino cultures," said Ramirez, who researched maternal depression and its relationship to child rearing in Chile. The NIH grant money will support about 16 students' research each year, Restrick said. The Center for Human Growth and Development initially received $400,000 annually, but Restrick said she feels that decreased funding is beneficial because an excess of students in the program can be difficult to manage. Halloween bash ends in deadly shootout MUNCIE, Ind. - A group of men who were turned away from a college Halloween party early yesterday opened fire on the small house, killing one man and wounding five others. About 100 people had packed into the home after a Ball State University fraternity party. About 4 a.m., a car pulled into an alley behind the house and began firing into the home, said Marlon Glass, 31, who was at the party. The house, in a student neighbor- hood near campus, was riddled with bullet holes, and a trail of shell cas- ings still led from the back door to the alley yesterday afternoon. The windows of some of the half-dozen cars parked behind the house had been shot out. Police and witnesses said at least two people had fired as many as 40 rounds from outside, and investigators were looking in to whether shots were fired inside the house as well. Julian Brown, 28, a former Ball State student from Gary, Ind., was foind dead in the kitchen, Muncie police Chief Joe Winkle said. Two people were in fair condition yesterday at Ball Memorial Hospital and two were treated and released, a hospital spokesperson said. One pe was treated at the scene. Porn Websites may change to xxx domain CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - U.S.- Rep. Christopher Cox (R-Calif.) is consider- ing proposing that Internet sites .with adult material have a new domain name. The sites would be asketo change from the current "cc0 domain to another domain, tentati.'ly labeled ".xxx". Domain names are the threeietiers that end a Website's address. Domains are used as tags for the content of a site. There are now six domain names, the commonly used ".com", ".org"; ".net" and ".edu", as well as ".gov" far gov- ernment-related sites and ".mil" for military sites. What careers can you pursue at Northwestern Health Sciences University? Chiropractic " Integrative health and wel/ness * Acupuncture " Oriental medicine a Therapeutic massage Northwestern Health Sciences University provides the widest range of choices in natural health care in the United States. The foundation of the University is Northwestern College of Chiropractic, which has earned an international reputation in 58 years as a pioneer in chiropractic education, patient care and scientific research.The individual attention and access to educational resources our students receive helps them excel in preparing to practice as outstanding health care practitioners. Combined with our pioneering clinical education programs and our assistance in job placement, Northwestern provides a superb educational experience. AROUND THE WPR LP- "; , Y r ']" .f \ . NORTHWESTERN H EALTH SCIENCES UNIVERSITY Minneapolis, Minnesota For a personal visit or more information, call 1-800-888-4777. Or go virtual at www.nwhealth.edu. "What a Great Experience!" 54 killed in fire in an illegal beer hall TOKYO - At least 54 South Koreans, mainly high school students, were killed and 75 others were injured Saturday in a fire that trapped more than 100 people inside a cramped, ille- gal beer hall in the port city of Inchon, 30 miles west of Seoul. Authorities said 97 of the 129 known victims were under the age of 18, the legal drinking age in Korea, and the youngest person killed in the blaze was just 13. Many of the teenagers died from inhaling smoke and toxic fumes in a second-floor beer hall and a third-floor billiard room in a building that had blocked windows, narrow corridors, only one small exit, and no sprinklers, officials and witnesses said yesterday. Police arrested four workers for alleged safety violations and were reportedly searching for the owner of the beer hall, which was a popular teen hangout known as a place where underage rev- clers could buy alcoholic drinks. Eight days before the inferno, police had ordered the beer hall to .be shut down for doing business without a license, and a spot check by 101 authorities on Wednesday found e establishment was closed, Lee- Se Young, chief of the city's Jung Ju dis- trict, said yesterday. Mistakes possible in Chechnya bombings MOSCOW - Prime Minister Vladimir Putin acknowledged yestey there "might have been some mistakes" during Russia's relentless bombing"of Chechnya, but dismissed the nofion that Russian forces deliberately target civilians. His remarks marked the first time a top Russian official had responded with anything but a flat "no" toerepotts of indiscriminate bombing, rocketitngB and shelling during the monthlong assault on separatist guerrillas. - CompiledJom Daily wire rep*. ~ii~ / ~ Learning the language. Meeting people. Coming face to face with history, art and architecture, culture, food and fun. UNIVERSITY STUDIES ABROAD CONSORTIUM... Small classes. Personal attention. Fully accredited - receive university credit. We provide great classes in intensive, language, history, anthropology, art, business, economics, political science... University Studies Abroad Consortium University of Nevada MS/323 Reno, Nevada 89557 (725) 784-6569 E-mail: usac@admin.unr.edu http://usac.unr.edu Nf 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 fail 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. B "7" 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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