2A - The Michigan Daiy - Thursday, September 9, 1999 NATION/WORLD Doctors watch as lungs light up WASHINGTON (AP) - In a labora- tory at the University of Virginia, a hand- ful of patients inhaled a deep breath of helium and watched their lungs light up. Scientists are exploring a dramatic new way to peer into patients' bodies: using specially treated gases that let doctors watch, for the first time, how breath flows through the lungs. The technology isn't just for lungs - it promises to light up other organs now difficult to see with conventional scan- ning. Researchers are poised to try it as a colon cancer test, and say it might also offer better images of the brain or a T-SHIRT PRINTING * LOWEST PRICES! HIGHEST QUALITY! FASTEST SER VICE! * 1002 PONTIAC TR. 994-1367 U E EEE U T woman's reproductive tract, without the said James MacFal discomfort or radiation of some of medical physicistc today's tests. the gases. "it really looks like it's going to help Scanners liken people," said UVA radiology Prof. imaging, or MRI, James Brookeman. illumination of par These so-called hyperpolarized they don't image gases are still highly experimental, They don't picture experts caution. But radiologists lungs, for instance compare the black blob an MRI pic- could help treatc tures as a lung with the brightly lit fibrosis, asthma, ev image of helium-filled lungs, and say a transplanted lung the need is great. Inhale a hyperp "It's a new idea and a new technique" lungs, just like you that provides "very striking" images, gen, and an MRI s Lott calls on I The Washington Post WASHINGTON - The Senate's top Republican called on Vtorney General Janet Reno to resign yesterday, amid grow- ing furor on Capitol Hill over recent disclosures regarding the FBI's April 1993 raid on the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas, that left about 75 people dead. Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.) became the highest ranking official to ask the attorney general to step down, saying her errors in handling the fiery standoff in Waco and other mistakes have left him doubting both her effectiveness and competence. The majority leader's comments came as Reno worked on finalizing the details of an independent inquiry into the mat- ter to be led by former Republican Sen. John Danforth of Missouri, an appointment Justice officials said she planned to announce at a press conference today. l, a Duke University who also has tested magnetic resonance provide incredible rts of the body. But some organs well. airflow through the e. Tracking airflow emphysema, cystic en monitor how well is adapting. olarized gas into the u would inhale oxy- hows a bright image Zeno, of plump lungs. Where theres an obstruction - where the lungs aren't doing their job - the image is dark. Tom Daniel, a UVA lung surgeon, uses hyperpolarized helium to help perform a tricky surgery for emphysema patients: slicing away dead portions of lung so the remaining good lung tissue moves and breathes more freely. It's called lung reduction surgery, and picking just which spot to cut is difficult but key. "it told me with a lot more confi- dence what part of her lung was not get- ting oxygen," Daniel said in descfbing a woman he operated on last month. toresign AROUND THE NATION (7 Lawmakers facing 'action-packed' fall WASHINGTON -The Republican-controlled Congress returned to work yes- terday, tugged by conflicting forces of compromise and confrontation with the White House on tax cuts, spending, health care, gun pontrol and other issues like- ly to dominate the final months of the year. "I don't see any indication the president wants to work with us," Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.) told reporters after smilingly predicting an "acti packed" September and October. 'What the president wants is more spending, more spending, more spending for everything." Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle sounded only slightly less pessimistic about the prospects for compromise. He said he had talked with Lott and he expressed the hope they could work together. But, he quickly added, "Clearly we (Democrats) will fight and we will aggres- sively pursue" an agenda that include gun control, education, legislation relating to HMOs, an increase in the minimum wage and money for hard-hit farmers. Both sides immediately began jockeying for position on education. Daschle (D- S.D.), listed the issue as part of the Democrats' fall agenda, and House Speaker Dennis Hastert traveled to an elementary school to underscore Republican sup There, he issued a call to President Clinton to "work together in education.L take steps today that will make our nation's schools better." Lott said Congress must also take a role in re-examining the Waco siege, and a flurry of new congressional probes, including investigations by the Senate Judiciary Committee and the House Government Reform Committee, are already beginning. While Lott said that Congress may need to "issue subpoe- nas in order to find out the truth," he suggested the broader question may be Reno's continuing ability to serve as attor- ney general. "I think the attorney general is falling into a pattern of not showing competence or probity" Lott said. "It's based on the pattern now that has developed over 6 1/2 years and the events involving the appointment of indepen- dent counsels, her refusal to provide information or answer questions by the Congress, the problem with the Waco inves- tigation," Lott said. . I - - f r I WHAT'S WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE? Anthropology Marketing Manager Theater Accounts Receivable Manager Psychology --- Director of Distribution Chemical Engineering- Receiving Manager NOTHING! At McMaster-Carr we believe that traditional business majors do not necessarily determine successful managers; INTELLIGENCE DOES. Diversity enhances our creativity. We seek individuals who excel at top schools like the University of Michigan to join our management development program. We are a national distributor of industrial products with regional headquarters in Cleveland, Chicago, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and New Jersey. We have led our industry for more than 90 years and need dynamic, creative, and intelligent individuals to LEAD OUR ORGANIZATION into the next millennium. You learn our business through hands-on opportunities where you are challenged to improve processes in finance, sales, marketing, and distribution. Our fast track program allows you to manage at an early stage in your career. You will experience CONSIDER- ABLE PROFESSIONAL GROWTH and tremendous daily satisfaction. We offer a truly outstanding salary and benefits package that includes full tuition reimbursement and generous profit sharing. Stop by and visit us at the University of Michigan Job Fair '99 on Tuesday, October 5th.We will be back on campus Monday, November 15, to conduct interviews. See the Career Planning and Placement Office for time and location information. Or introduce yourself by sending your resume or just a note to aur.personnel@mcmaster.com. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer McMASTE R-CARR supply company www.mcmaster.com Ii M - .."= ROCK Continued from Page 1A the rock in a landfill. With the finan- cial help from Daughters of the American Revolution, the 25-ton rock was transported to its current location. Ann Arbor residents used the Rock to celebrate the 200th anniversary of George Washington's birth. A plaque, last seen in 1982, was fixed to the Rock and dedicated to Washington. The plaque is now buried under almost a foot of paint. The rock was first painted in the 1950s by Michigan State University fans prior to a football game. They painted a large green "S" - thus starting the tradition of painting the Rock. Through the years, Olsen said community members have voiced many complaints about the Rock, the vandalism associated with it and the noise made by people painting the campus landmark. In an attempt to compensate for this problem, the city park department bought the land on which the Rock sits in 1993, hoping that students would follow park guide- lines. A plaque stating the rules and open- ing times of the (ark was erected at that time. The park closes daily from mid- night until 6 a.m. "The Rock is so much apart of Michigan," said LSA first-year student Ryan Stevenson, "that even the U of M Monopoly game has the Rock on it." Whether these guidelines will make a difference is yet to be seen. Jennie Brooks, a member of the Luther Co-op across the street from the Rock said, "The guidelines will work, but only if they are enforced. "Otherwise, I don't think that anyone will pay attention." She added that the rock is painted nearly every night, especially during Rush Week. DEPOSITS Continued from Page 1A beforehand. Black also said it is common knowl- edge that landlords cannot charge for cleaning. "I try to be reasonable," he said, adding that he rarely has to deduct for damages. LSA senior Wendy McCoy, who has three years of renting experience under her belt, said she is aware of her rights as a tenant and has never had a problem with getting her money back. "We've done our share of damage but take care of it ourselves," McCoy said. "Why deal with the legal hassle?" She added that she thinks it is easier for tenants to repair some damages on their own because the landlord may charge more than what is necessary to fix them. Tenants who are having problems receiving their security deposits or who have questions about their legal rights as tenants can contact coun- selors at the Ann Arbor Tenants Union via e-mail at aatu tumich. edu. FESTI FALL Continued from Page 1A "Our organization assists and pro- tects tenants' rights against landlords," Chusie said. "But we're not only target- ing students who are renting now, but thse (first-vear students) who will rent Frankel continued long life in hiding HAMBURG, Germany - Though he had amassed a fortune, rogue financier Martin Frankel didn't live like a millionaire during his four months on the lam. Mostly he secluded himself at modest European lodgings and watched movie videos. Sought by the FBI in an international manhunt, Frankel evaded early capture by traveling under an alias with a counterfeit British passport. But once settled in Rome and later in Hamburg, Frankel didn't try too hard to conceal himself, venturing out to eat in local restaurants with the women who accompanied him on his flight and mak- ing numerous phone calls to associates and lawyers back in the United States. Along the way, Frankel - whose casual demeanor charmed investors - was able to slip past authorities chasing him on charges of money laundering and wire fraud. The man who was said to have met numerous women through personal ads traveled at times with companions who didn't even know he was on the run. Smoke rising from Frankel's Connecticut mansion signaled the col- lapse of his empire, built by allegedly swindling clients out of at least 5218 million, possibly much more. By the time authorities arrived investigate the flames - discovering fireplace and file cabinet full of burn- ing documents - Frankel had begun his life on the run. Televised debate sets precedent in Mexico MEXICO CITY - The men Mexicans call "the Fantastic Four" pr sented a revolutionary spectacle on lil television Wednesday night - four candidates publicly competing for the presidential nomination of the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party. The four were taking part in the first televised debate in the first presidential primary in 70 years of uninterrupted rule by the party, known as the PRI by its Spanish-language initials. The hour- long square-off was a watershed in a country in which every president sine the 1930s has handpicked his successor. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. Lapses in radiation protection found Energy Secretary Bill Richardson ordered a 24-hour "safety stand down" at the agency's Paducah, Ky., uranium plant yesterday after a preliminary probe uncovered lapses in programs designed to protect workers from harmful radiation. The announcement is expected to idle about 400 workers for a day while officials begin a comprehensive review of training and radiation monitoring at the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant. The safety order applies to employ- ees of the Department of Energy and its contractors at the site but will not directly affect the plant's uranium oper- ations, which are now managed by a private corporation, U.S. Enrichment Corp., under the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's oversight. USEC employs about 1,400 people and says it is unaware of any significant safety problems. "This will be an effective way to focus attention," Richardson said in an interview before the announcement, "and also a way to get managers and workers to bring renewed attention to environment, safety and health." Richardson's action comes exactly a month after he launched a major probe of worker exposures at Paducah, a pro- ducer of enriched uranium for nuel weapons and power plants since 1952. Study: 1 in 4 children in alternative schools SACRAMENTO - About one in four U.S. children are going to alterna- tive and private schools as choices other than neighborhood public schools are increasing across the country, a n study found. The percentage attending private school has remained at 10 percent for years. But with newer options of charter schools, magnet schools, open enroll- ment and voucher programs, the alter- natives - including private schools - account for a full 25 percent of U.S. students. AROUND THE WORLD. ' ' iI / l'. J_ _I 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 $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, yearlong (September through April) is $165. On-campus sub- scriptions for fal term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. 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Jacob WheelerJon Zemke ARTS Christopher Cousino, Jessica Eaton, Editors WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Amy Barber. Toyn Akinmusuru SUBEDITORS: Gabe Fajuri (Music). Jenni Glenn (Fine/Peforming Artsh Caitlin Hall (TV/New Media), Gina Hamaday (Books). Ed ShOlinsky (Film) STAFF: Matthew Barrett, Jason Birchmeier, Alisa Claeys. Jeff Druchniak. Cortney Dueweke, Brian Egan, Steven Gertz. Jewel Gopwani. Chris Kula. Erin Podolsky, Aaron Rich. Adlin Rosli. Chris Tkaczyk, Jonah Victor. Ted Watts. John Uhl. Curtis Zimmerman. PHOTO Louis Brown, Dana Linnane, Editors STAFF: ihani Jones, Jessica Johnson. Jeremy Menchik, David Rochkrind, Sara Schenk, Michelle Swelnis. Il 0 ONLINE STAFF Toyrn Akinmusuru. Seth Benson, Rachel Berger, Amy Chen. Todd Graham, Paul Wong. GRAPHICS STAFF:Alex Hogg. Satadru Pramanik, Editor riliss . ssss es~ Es - _ _ I