_I 2A -The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 20, 1999 NATION/WORLD Reform Party splits over Buchanan The Washington Post Television commentator and GOP dissident Patrick Buchanan appears to have a good chance of winning the Reform Party nomination for president in 2000, although his prospective candidacy is already polarizing the embattled political organization, according to party leaders and activists. Buchanan's likely candidacy has raised fears among some party members of a religious right takeover and triggered open warfare between forces loyal to Reform Party founder Ross Perot and those in the camp of Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura, the party's highest elect- ed official. But enough party leaders have put out a welcome mat to suggest that only a full-scale fight by Ventura, who has dismissed Buchanan as a "retread," or a decision by Perot to run for a third time would provide strong enough opposition to ensure a Buchanan rejection. While not endorsing Buchanan, those sending clear signals that they could back him include outgoing Reform chair Russ Verney and 1996 vice presidential candidate Pat Choate - both of whom are allied with Perot - along with Lenora Fulani, the leftist third-party leader in New York who has thrown in her lot with the Reform Party. Fulani has become a power in the Reform Party because she has a phalanx of supporters who, unlike most party activists, will vote as a block. She said recent- ly on CNN she could overlook differences she has with Buchanan concerning issues such as gay rights and abortion because Buchanan "can play a role as a unifier, bring everybody together." Even Jack Gargan, who won the chair of the Reform Party earlier this summer with Ventura's backing, dif- fered with the Minnesota governor over Buchanan. "Buchanan's position on all the 'America first' concepts certainly fit in nicely with Reform concepts," Gargan said in an interview. "We are for a balanced budget, keeping jobs in America, tightening up on immigration, elimination of the influence of lobbyists and special interests. Buchanan has had a strong record along those lines for years" The most adaman opposition to Buchanan is coming from Ventura and his state Reform Party leaders. Buchanan "has been out there for like eight years run- ning as president, and I haven't heard his political reform agenda." said Dean Barkley, Ventura s former campaign chair. "I still see him having that abortion issue and that social agenda on the front burner, and I still say if he continues to do that he's not going to sell well with a number of the people in the Reform Party" Ventura first attempted to promote a presidential bid by former Connecticut Sen. and Got Lowell Weicker, and more recently by businessman Donald Trump. Neither has produced a groundswell of support. Polls shows Buchanan getting 8 to 10 percent of the vote as a Reform Party candidate, with much more com- ing from Republican voters than Democrats. He would cost the GOP nominee a net loss of 3 percentage points, according to sone analysts. ATTENTION UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE STUDENTS WORLDWIDE m.' ENTER.COM PURSUE JOB AND INTERNSHIP OPPORTU N ITI ES THAT SPAN THE GLOBE CCampus enter.com The world's largest campus job fair .JAZZ Continued from Page 1A Red Hot Louisiana Band. At first glance, the group, with its guitar, bass and drums-heavy sound, seemed just like some bouncing blues. But Chevier's instrument, which he could make groove with the best of the Hammond B-3 organ grinders, was an accordion. From French lyrics to their wash- board plaver< this was no ordinary blues band. For while the large, pur- ple-suited guitarist squeezed out spry licks similar to Guitar Slim as he strut around the stage, the drums. washboard and accordion would throw a little two-step rhythmic emphasis against that faithful blues progression on occasion. The crowd loved this New Orleans- bred concoction and a cloud of dust rose as hazy as the band's merger of Cajun, R&B and blues rose from the feet of dancing audience members. Yet the afternoon's various lines of musical lineage culminated with the set of tenor saxophonist Pharaoh Sanders. Reminiscent of his early mentor John Coltrane, Sanders acted as a sort of spiritual leader, guiding his band and, at times, the audience through his performance. On Coltrane's "Od~' Sanders began playing long phrases, then short interjections strung so close together that they became one long passage that bubbled into a chaotic mess of rises and falls and vacilla- tions between low fluttering honks, soulful mourns and sharp high- pitched shrieks. He would leave the stage for a while, only to emerge and hush the ruminations of his sidemen on piano, bass and drums into a percussive lull. By the end of the song, Sanders and the crowd were exchanging screams of "OlM!" that harkened to the call and response foundation of all blues and jazz. Throughout his set he shifted between the ecstatic and the subdued, even playing a rather pretty, but con- fusing., interpretation of Whitney Houston's "The Greatest Love of All." It was certainly the most enigmatic moment of the festival, with Sanders half suppressing a smile that suggest- ed the audience was on the outside of an inside joke. One might hope that those two boys took a break from playing to catch that joke; that they already know how to learn the lessons Turre remembered and that maybe, some- day, they will return to the festival and deliver its punchline. AROUND THE NATION Democrats call for minimum wage bik WASHINGTON - Congressional Democrats plan this week to launch big push to raise the minimum wage, forcing Republican leaders to come with alternatives to avoid political damage or even defeat on the sensiti issue of helping low-income Americans. "There's an interest on both sides, Democrat and Republican, to get tb done before we adjourn" for the year, said Rep. Jack Quinn (R-N.Y.), a moderate who has been working with Democrats to produce a bipa majority to pass the legislation. The first test is likely to come tomorrow when Senate Democrats will t to use a pending bankruptcy bill to force votes on legislation backed President Clinton and most Democratic lawmakers to raise the hourly fe eral wage floor by SI to S6.15 during the next two years. Democrats appear to have the votes needed to block a move by GOP lea ers to keep the bankruptcy bill from being expanded to include a minimu wage increase, gun controls or other proposals opposed by mo Republicans. This could open the way for consideration of the wage initiative - another delay if GOP leaders decide to shelve the bankruptcy measu avoid votes on unrelated issues. Ford develops new duced working models. But Ford is t first automaker to give the Ener fuel efficient car Department such a hybrid family car tb can be driven daily and that they can te WASHINGTON - Ford Motor Company is delivering a full-size family Automakers critical car to the U.S. Energy Department next , nonth that gets about 60 mpg - twice of Consumer Rep the gas mileage of a typical car. Government officials are calling the Consumer Reports, the magazine ri step a milestone in joint government- lions turn to before shopping for ev industry attempts to find technologies to thing from cosmetics to cars, is un achieve a mass-produced, family car that fire by two auto makers in lawsuits th gets far greater fuel efficiency than constitute the most serious attack ever today's family cars. the 63-year-old publication. The Ford car, called the P2000 LSR, Judges in Southern California coid has a hybrid diesel-electric engine sys- decide as early as this week to send Jl tem and can easily be refueled and driven federal cases to trial, and some lcg daily. It has the passenger room, trunk experts say the suits could have a da space and driving acceleration of a gerously chilling effect on the m Taurus. But it is made mostly of alu- willingness to publish negative reviews minum and other light weight materials, The product-disparagement suits making it 40 percent lighter than the Japanese auto makers Suzuki Moto Taurus, or about 2,000 pounds in weight, Corp. and Isuzu Motors Ltd., claim tli Ford engineers said. magazine rigged driving tests for i Ford will turn over the keys to the car 1988 review of Suzuki's Samurai an in October, company officials said. its 1996 review of the Isuzu Troop Other automakers are working on similar and its twin, the Isuzu-built Acu fuel-efficient hybrid cars or have pro- SLX. AR__UDTH E ORLD Mexico opposes plan Some of Mexico's biggest compame are leading a fierce lobbying effort f to punish businesses defeat the proposal. WASHINGTON -- The Mexican Elderly secret agent government is opposing a push by the h n' Br a U.S. Congress to levy major penalties caught against businesses with ties to drug traf- fickers, saying the sanctions could smear LONDON - Admitting to havin innocent companies and damage U.S.- spied for the Soviet Union for nearly fou Mexican relations. decades, 87-year-old Melita Norwod6 The legislation, approved by the has enraged and baffled Britainwh Senate in July, would require the Clinton calmly waiting to see if she will be ps administration to publish an annual list ecuted for treachery. of major international drug traffickers, The great-grandmother who pass their front companies and other business nuclear weapons secrets to Moscow ha associates. It would bar the listed compa- been depicted as England's equivao nies and individuals from doing business Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, who wer in the United States, cut off their access convicted of trying to pass U.S. milita" to American banks and freeze their U.S. secrets to the Soviets in the 1940s ad, assets. It also would subject U.S. compa- subsequently executed. She has bee nies that work with the listed companies called Britain's most important femal to civil and criminal penalties. spy by hard-boiled reporters who con Administration officials say that, after fronted her with her deeds - and the initially opposing the legislation, they are left her house with jars of her homemad working with members of Congress to chutney. fashion a version that the House and President Clinton can support. - Compiled from Daily wire repotm 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 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 764-05' Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554: Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to dailydetters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://www.michigandaily.com EDIORAL TAF.Halh& . a s E itriChe NEWS Jennifer Yachnin, Managing Editor EDITORS: Nikita Easley. Katie Plona. Mike Spahn, Jaimie Winkler. STAFF: Lindsey Alpert, Phil Bansal, Jeannie Bauman. Risa Berrin. Mara tBrill. Nick Bunkley. Adam Brian Cohen. 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