2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 4, 1999 NATION/WORLD MENINGITIS Continued from Page 1A Yesterday, health officials at the University of Virginia began the school's second round of mass inocula- tions for influenza and meningcoccal meningitis. In the first round of vaccinations Tuesday, health professionals gave 2,000 meningitis vaccinations and 2,081 flu shots to Virginia students. The school charges students $70 for the meningitis vaccine. The mass meningitis vaccination at Virginia was not in response to any reports of illness. Sandra Murray, nursing supervisor at the Elson Student Health Center, said parents of Virginia students could sign up their children for the vaccine last month during parents weekend. Murray said that although part of the high amount of participation in the pro- gram could be attributed to recent meningitis scares on other college cam- puses, a great success of the program can be tied to the school's effort to edu- cate its students on the health issue. "Fortunately, we haven't had a scare here, Murray said. In a similar measure, about 1,500 George Washington University students were vaccinated yesterday. Health officials at Eastern Michigan University are offering the meningitis vaccine to students for $89, said Ellen Gold, director of EMU's health services. EMU has inoculated about 300 stu- dents against meningitis during the past month, Gold said. Officials said although an EMU stu- dent was admitted to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in Ypsilanti last month, there hasn't been any "panic" on campus. Gold said EMU health services tries to ensure that students who receive the vaccine don't leave the office without information about the illness. "We're trying to take the time to edu- cate our students," she said "People don't talk about meningitis. It's not an understood disease." Jim Westman, director of Purdue University Health Services, said the school negotiated a reduction in the vaccination price. Purdue was then able to lower the cost of the vaccine from $103.50 to $70. Westman said no cases of meningi- tis have been reported at Purdue and students have not rushed to get inocu- lated, citing that health personnel have been giving only about 15 meningitis shots per day on the 36,878-student campus. UNIFORMS Continued from Page 1A unveiling when forward Brandon Smith - whose number 34 is featured on the uniforms at Moe's - walks the catwalk inside of Crisler Arena. The supposed secret of the design of the uniforms, wasn't really a secret for some. "We ordered them back in February;' VanDeWege said. "We knew what they would look like when we purchased them." Michigan's manager of trademarks and licensing, Martha Johnson Chaddock, said the unofficial unveiling was not entirely a surprise. "it was an issue of coordinating with our partner, Nike' she said. "It's difficult for us to control when retailers receive the jerseys and get them up for sale.4" Some fan Websites reported the exact style this summer. And Nike also blew the cover when the company revealed the North Carolina jersev last weekend. The company worked on both the Tar Heels' and Wolverines' models together, with many similarities in the final product. A block 'M' appears near the top right of the jersey, under the collar in place of a written 'Michigan.' Michigan rein rIos, who diedthe ne 1u,11C1 un;iorm process, sid a printed \ich iean isnt needed thanks to the well-known mage ot the block 'NI.' Below the 'Ni' resis the player's num- ber Two stripes o! the opposite color trail over the sides of the erse\. adding a l1ile more color. it's somew hat of a elebraion, tying in unilorms irom the past," Michigan men's basketball coach Brian Ellerbe said. "I felt i was a nice design. Michigan freshman guard Jamal Crawford, who has had a glance at the new uniforms, gave it his own raring. "I1 give it a 10," Crawford said last week, before the uniforms were spotted at Moe's. Hut Craw ford said eren if the jersey was ugly, Id still give it a 10. After all it's a Michigan ersev, and that's all that matters to Inc Nike, the Athletic Department's apparel supplier, brought the original idea to Ellerbe two years ago. lie asked the company to make a formal presen- tation in the Michigan lockerroom fbr the players. Based on the Wolverines' input, Nike caen up with the final design. The Wolverines will retain uniforms in each of the three colors they have used in the past white, blue and maize. AROUND THE NATION 2 killed at Seattle boat repair company SEATTLE -- A man in camouflage clothing and sunglasses calmly walked in and shot four employees at a boat repair company yesterday, killing two of them. The attack came one day after a deadly workplace shooting in Hawaii. Law officers hunting for the gunman spread a massive dragnet around the area north of downtown Seattle, using helicopters and dogs to search into the even'. Residents were told to stay in their houses, while children at 20 schools e locked inside for part of the day before they were sent home. "He walked in and started shooting. That's all we know' said Pam McCammon, a police spokesperson. Police said survivors told them that the man said nothing before shooting seven to nine rounds with a 9 mm handgun. A 19-year-old man who survived with a gunshot wound in his arm said the gun- man didn't work at the Northlake Shipyard shop and he had never seen him before. All the victims were men. The other survivor, a 58-year-old man, remained uncon- scious in critical condition with a gunshot wound to the chest, hospital officials said. Police did not identify any of the victims, though local TV said one of the dead was 26-year-old Peter Giles of Seattle. The suspect, described as possibly in his 30s, was wearing an ov ercoat over c- ouflage clothing and a brown hat when he walked in the front door and went t a back office of the shipyard on the edge of Lake Union. -- --------- Looking For Dynamic Career Opportunities? we offer you the Delta Air Lines is a name recognized the world over. Recently named by leading industry publications as "Airline of the Year" and "Best Managed Airline," we are also the recipient of the "Business Innovation Award." It takes over 70,000 team members in a wide variety of roles to provide quality service to over 105 million passengers per year. 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Visit Our Website at www.delta-aircom/employ Governor race may be decided by House JACKSON, Miss. - The Democrats seemed headed for victory in Mississippi's race for governor yesterday, after a deadlock between the top two can- didates made it almost certain the contest would be decided with an unprecedented vote in the state House. When the 122 legislators - 86 of them Democrats - convene in January, they may have to do what 750,000 voters couldn't: settle the con- test between Democratic Lt. Gov. Ronnie Musgrove and Republican for- mer Rep. Mike Parker. A victory for Musgrove would be a big win for the Democrats, who took Southern governorships from the GOP last year in Alabama and South Carolina. They lost Mississippi to Gov. Kirk Fordice in 1991, when he became the first Republican to hold the office since Reconstruction. Musgrove received about 6,500 more votes in Tuesday's election than Parker. But Musgrove fell short of the 5.0 percent-plus required for outright victory. An independent and a Reform Party candidate split 14,000 votes that would have made the difference. If absentee ballots don't break the stalemate, the state Constitution calls for the election to be decided in g House. And that prospect troubes Republicans far more than Democrats. Report adds to HIV treatment questions Using sophisticated new technology, scientists have discovered that the human immunodeficiency virus not only remains hidden and latent in t e body, it continues to reproduce spread within seemingly successfully treated patients. Coming on the heels of other dis- turbing findings regarding the limits of Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy, the study reported in yesterday's Journal of the American Medical Association adds to a growing uneasi- ness about treatment of HIV infection, the cause of AIDS. AM AROUND THE WaaLD z? Y lr , t _:: .::;o:.i November 1st - 24th Students Honoring Outstanding University Tbeaching Presidential hopefuls wrap up campaigns MEXICO CITY - Four presiden- tial candidates competing in the first-ever primary of Mexico's rul- ing party wrapped up their cam- paigns yesterday amid raucous ral- lies and warnings of possible vote fraud. The latest polls showed Francisco Labastida, a close ally of President Ernesto Zedillo, in the lead. But the barbs flying between Labastida and his chief opponent, Roberto Madrazo, raised questions about whether the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, will suffer a devastating split after Sunday's election. The primary marks a major depar- ture from the practice in which Mexican presidents handpicked the PRI nominees, their virtual succes- sors. The party has won every presi- dential race since 1929. If the open primary is a novelty, however, the final-day rallies yester- day were pure PRI tradition - music-drenched celebrations packed with cheering supporters in free T- shirts and caps and many buse9o by pro-PRI organizations and unions. U.S., China may resume military tals BEIJING - The United States and China are close to agreement on resum- ing military-to-military contacts that were suspended by Beijing in the of the May 7 bombing of China's embassy in Yugoslavia, according to sources in Beijing. Following the visit of U.S. Undersecretary of State Thomas Pickering to China last week, the sources said Chinese officials indicated they were ready for the resumption of those ties, which would mark a major step in restoring U.S.-China relations. - Conpiled from Daily vtrerep 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. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336: Opinion.764-050 Circulation 764-0558: Classified advertising 7640557: Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://www.michigandaily.com. EDITORIAL STAFF Heather Kamins, Editor in Chief NEWS Jennifer Yachnin, Managing Editor EDITORS: Nikita Easley. Katie Piona, Mike Span, Jamie Winkler. STAFF: Lindsey Alpert. Jeannie Baumann, Risa Berrin. Marta Brili. Nick Bunkley. Charles Chen. 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SPORTS Ricki Freeman, Managing Editor EDITORS T.J Berka, Chris Diorey. Josh Kleinbaum, Andy Lateck. STAFF: Emily Achenbaum. Matthew Baroas. David Den Herder. Sam Duwe. Dan Dingerson. Jason Emeott, Sarah Ensor, Mark Francescutti, Geoff Gagnon, Brian Galvn. Raphael Goodstein, Arun Gopal, Chris Grandstaff. David Horn, Michael Kern, Dna Krischer. Ryan C. Moloney, David Mosse, Stephanie Offen. Jeff Phillips, Kevin Rosenfield. David Roth, Tracy Sandier. Jon Schwartz, enamaiin Singer. Nita Srivastava, Lima Subramanian, Jacob Wheeler, Dan Williams, Jon Zemke. ARTS christopher Cousino, Jessica Eaton, Editors WEEKEND. ETC. EDITORS: Jeff Druchniak, Nicole Pearl, ToyinAkinmusuru SUB-EDITORS: Gabe Foul (Music). Jenni Glenn (iee/Peforming Artsh Caitlin Hall (TV/New Medial. Gina Hamadey ,Booksi. Ed Sholinsky (Filml STAFF: Matthew Barrett. Jason Birchmeier. Alisa Ciaeys, Cortney Dueweke, Brian Egan, Steven Gertz. Jewel Gopwani, Chris Kula, Erin Podolsky. Aaron Rich. Adlin Rosli, Chris Tkaczyk, Jonah Victor, Ted Watts, John Uiht, Curtis Zimmermann. PHOTO Louis Brown, Dana Unnane, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITOR: DavidRocnkind ARTS EDITOR: Jessica Johnson STAFF: Allison Caner, Sam Holienshead, Dhani Jones, Danny Kalick, David Katz, Emily Linn. Marjorie Marshall. Jeremy Menchik, JoannaPaine Sara Schink, Michelle SweIs, Alen 1%oili, Kimltsu Yogachi. ONLINE stadru Pramanik, Managing Editor EDITORS: Toyin Aknmusuru. Rachel Berger. Paul Wong STA: Amy Ament Angela Cummings. Dana Goldberg, James Schiff. Peter Znou. DESIGNER: Seth Benson DISPLAY SALES Steve Jones, Msnagr m