eather :ro Partly cloudy. High 59 Sunny. High 65. wr mx "Ut . Low 41. One hundred eight years of ed/toriailfreedom Tuesday September 21,1999 ' $ mposium ddresses utomotive echnology 0 Caitlin Nish the Daiy The Sixth Annual Strategic and chnical Symposium to discuss new tomotive technology will be held orrow and Thursday at the Ypsilanti arriott Hotel. The symposium is cosponsored by niversity's Center for Integrated i systems and will focus on vehic- r applications of displays and crosensors. "The symposium has two purposes to provide opportunities to share ughts about business direction and ys of communicating new technolo- and to share new information on hnology," said Prof. Ken Wise, assis- t dean of research in the College of gineering. entations will be made about w technological ideas including flat nel displays, microsensors and icroelectric mechanical systems. The symposium originated six years o at the same time that the state gan funding the Center for Display chnology and Manufacturing. The rpose of the center was to provide search and training in flat panel dis- a echnology. Flat panel displays are ionly used in laptop computers, Impilots automobiles and aircrafts. at: Strategic Last summer d Technical the center was integrated into ymposium the Center for ere: Ypsilanti Integrated arriott Microsystems. en: Tomorrow "The center has d Thursday at been redefined to encompass more general microsystems. R -We now have a broader range of research. erefore, the symposium has also en redefined for a broader scope," id Fred Terry, assistant professor of ectrical engineering. This year's symposium will include Seakers and many exhibitors. e~sentatives from the University, elphi/Delco, DaimlerChrysler AG, rd Motor Company, Lear orporation, Philips, Visteon, Dow hemical, the Air Force Research Lab d Michigan State University are ong the speakers included in the two y conference. Several of the participating automo- le companies will provide prototype hicles for display. " jsteon will feature a Windstar > ete with a heads up display. This eans that things like speed will be splayed on the windshield rather an on the dashboard. It will also ave a rear seat entertainment center," rid Barbara Rice, Center for tegrated Microsystems administra- ye assistant. The flat panel displays and See AUTO, Page 7 Snyder Breaking the fast PeaceI a1%rrives East I DILI, Indonesia (AP) -The interna- tional peace force assigned to bring tro order to East Timor's murderous chaos frt landed without resistance yesterday, int effectively marking the end of co Indonesia's control after 24 turbulent years. A Armored personnel carriers rolled An from the bellies of Hercules transport in planes and clattered down the rubbish- ha strewn streets of Dili. Timorese refugees in tattered clothes watched in M amazement. sa But the real test for the 7,500-mem- A ber international force will come when th it spreads into remote areas to protect a ing still terrified populace. It was unclear whether the militias would fade away or th transform themselves into guerrilla tic fighters sniping and harassing the ha unwanted foreigners. rit In wave after wave, the transport planes from Northern Australia airlifted E more than 1,000 soldiers and tons of D ammunition, explosives, land mines sp and supplies. The troops arrived in a city aban- af doned by its people and left in smoking S ruins, with no food, no electricity, no of clean water and thousands of desperate Ti refugees trying to get out. Within hours vo of beginning the operation at dawn, re heavily armed combat troops from Australia, New Zealand and Britain ti were in control of the airport and the pr harbor, the two vital links to the city.ca force 0 -in imjor As they moved through town, the oops could see black smoke from esh fires billowing over the city and, the evening, the glow of flames in the untrvside. "There is a lot of destruction," said .stralian Maj. Chip Henriss- ndersen. But some residents emerged to the streets to gawk. Some shook nds with the troops and smiled. "A lot of people were saying Hello ister,' probably their only English," id Henriss-Andersen, a naturalized Lstralian born in Cleveland, Ohio. "I ink pretty soon we'll have them say- g 'G'day'" The airlift was to continue through e night, and by daybreak today opera- on commanders said they hoped to ve 2,300 troops in the half-island ter- ory. "It's been quite an encouraging day. verything's gone very smoothly," said uncan Lewis, the Australian military okesperson in Canberra. The arrival of the force just five days ter it was authorized by the U.N ecurity Council spelled the beginning f the end of Indonesian rule in East 'imor, where four-fifths of the people oted for independence in an Aug. 30 ferendum. Despite threats to attack the interna- onal force, there was no sign of the ro-Indonesian militias launched a ampaign of arson, terror and murder. MARJORE MARSHALL/Daily University students gather together at sundown yesterday to break the fast during the observance of Yom Kippur, the Jewish day of atonement. Cellular epidemic infects campus lifie By Anand Giridharadas Daily Staff Reporter A cashier at the Cava Java cafe has of late noticed quite a few customers chatting on their cellular phones while sipping lattes. He thinks nothing of it. But every so often, someone 'in line takes a call right when it's their turn to order and holds everyone up. "That," he said, "is really annoying" While out playing golf, one student became red-faced when a melodic beeping rang out from his pocket, just as his friend started his swing. The friend was not amused. A genetics professor, interrupted in mid-sentence by a student's incoming call, sarcastically asked the student, "Would you like to get that?" Mobile phone users'are everywhere. And they are changing the face of campus life. From the lawns of the Diag to side- walk coffee shops, they are easy to spot, clutching their palm-sized devices, seeming deeply absorbed in conversations about where they are and what they ate for lunch. Driven by a steady decline in service costs and a booming economy that is leaving many Americans with record disposable income, a growing number of college students here and on cam- puses across the nation are going wire- less. Students say their phones are indis- pensable to them. Lured by attractive pricing schemes, most say they bought them to become more accessi- ble and consolidate their channels of communication to one number. Many felt they would be safer in an emer- gency. "Now I can be reached 24 hours a day," said Francois Prouhet, an Art and Design sophomore who said he is always on the move. He has had his phone for eight months. LSA senior Casey Costello admitted his phone was "a fun toy." But he said, in all seriousness, that it had in many ways simplified his life. Most mobile phone users soon dis- cover that what begins as necessity often slips into frivolity. The phones, they say, have become an integral part of their lifestyles, with uses ranging from calls for roadside assistance to deep dish pizza orders. Although the students have survived for many years without mobile phones, See CELLULAR, Page 2 Third-year Law student stops on a curb to make a call on her cellular phone Sunday. The use of cellular phones on campus has increased In recent years; resents ew work y Jennifer Yachnin aily News Editor With lights dimmed and a silent crowd aiting on his words, poet Gary Snyder, an plonmentalist, activist and member of the Generation, took stage in front of a acked house at Rackham Amphitheatre last fight. Snyder is "a contemporary hunter-gath- rer who knows how to get off the trail," ormer English department Chair John Knott said in his introduction of Snyder, GOP Mackinac Island conference highlights state's political impact By Nick Bunkley Daily Staff Reporter More than 2,400 Republican leaders, supporters and activists crowded Mackinac Island's Grand Hotel last weekend for a conference highlighted with appearances by three GOP presidential hope- fuls eager for key Michigan votes. But more noticeable for ;LSA junior Rory Diamond, was the candidate missing from the Michigan Republican Mackinac Island Leadership Conference. Diamond, president of the University's College Republicans, attended the conference in the hopes of seeing Texas Gov. George W. Bush. Bush had planned to travel to Mackinac Island but instead who took advantage of Bush's absence to have their turn in the GOP spotlight. But they don't have a realistic shot at the presidency, Diamond said. "Essentially, they're almost a sideshow," said Diamond, who said he would have been more interested in hearing from Bush and former American Red Cross president Elizabeth Dole. Dole declined an invitation to attend the confer- ence. Diamond said the number of GOP party leaders and supporters in attendance indicates that Michigan will be a primary focus of the candi- dates. U.S. House Majority Whip Tom DeLay1(R- Texas) delivered remarks Sunday. JESSICA JOHNSON/Daly Poet Gary Snyder reads from his new book, "Gary Snyder Reader: Poetry, Prose and Translation" at Rackham Ampitheatre last night. newest publication "Gary Snyder Reader: Poetry, Prose and Translation." The book is a collection of Snyder's pub- In his piece titled, "The North Botswana Elephant Range," Snyder describes his travels with his son through the wilder-