2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 8, 2000 NATION WORLD Police find Colombian drug sub FACATATIVA, Colombia (AP) - In a scheme worthy of Jules Verne that awed even veteran naval officers, Colombian drug traffickers were building a sophisticated submarine to smuggle cocaine, reported- ly with help from American and Russian criminals. Police stumbled upon the half-built submarine Wednesday night in a warehouse outside the capital, Bogota - 7,500 feet up in the Andes mountains and 210 miles from any port. Even by smugglers' innovation standards, this was off the charts - Verne could have called it "20,000 Kilos Under the Sea." The 100-foot submarine could have crossed an ocean, surfaced off Miami or other coastal cities and surreptitiously unloaded its drug cargo. "In the 30 some-odd years I have been in law enforcement I have never seen anything like this," Leo Arreguin, the chief of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in Colombia, said yesterday. "This is huge,' Arreguin said. "We're talking about being able to load up to 200 tons of cocaine in this submarine." However, other officials put the cargo capacity much lower, but they also it could carry at least several tons: Top officials flocked to the warehouse yesterday to marvel at the lengths that Colombian drug traffickers, who supply more than 80 percent of the world's cocaine and a rising share of its heroin, go to export their illicit products. Police were led to the find by suspicious area resi- dents, who had seen Americans hanging around the warehouse, located in a cow pasture off a highway near the suburb of Facatativa. ACROSS THE NATION Superstores limit sales of violent videos WASHINGTON -- Young people itching to wreak virtual havoc with an Uzi via their Playstation will have to bring along a parent if they want to buy a vio- lent video game from some major retailers. Kmart announced yesterday it will refuse sale of mature-rated games to any- one under 17, using a barcode scanner that will prompt cashiers to ask for ider fication from youths. After Kmart's news conference in Washington, Wal-Mart announced it would enact the same policy. In a letter last month to Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.), the pres- ident of Toys R Us said the practice is already in place at his company's stores. Sessions applauded the move, but said he would prefer that retailers stop sell- ing mature-rated games, as Montgomery Ward and Sears, Roebuck and Co. already have done. But Illinois Attorney General Jim Ryan, who started the campaign against violent video games in April and got members of Congress on board, said Kmart is doing exactly what he asked of retailers: Remove the games from the hands of children. "America is starting to realize that if we bombard our children with images of murder, there may be a price to pay later," Ryan said. Games rated "M"for mature by the video game industry should not be sold buyers under 17, Ryan said. Many of those games put playes in a killer's role, often showing bloody body parts and gruesome deaths. National goe . debt Clock goes dark NEW YORK (AP) - Call it a sign of the times. The National Debt Clock, an electronic billboard near Times Square that has recorded the nation's once-skyrocketing debt sec- ond by second for the past decade, was switched off yesterday, a testa- ment to big budget surpluses and a renewed sense of fiscal responsibil- ity in Washington. The plug was pulled on the birth- day of New York real estate develop- er Seymour Durst, the man who invented and bankrolled the clock. Douglas Durst, now president of his father's business, said the clock's time had come, what with the nation- al debt at nearly $5.7 trillion and dropping. "It was developed, erected and maintained by my father to focus attention on the soaring national debt," he said, "and it has served its function." The elder Durst put up the odome- ter-like sign in 1989. Often, the debt climbed so fast that the last several digits were just a blur. The clock had to be turned off for a few months in the mid-'90s when the debt was increasing so fast it crashed the computer that calculates it. "I always used to look at it and watch the numbers churning for- ward. It was a little scary," said Jen- nifer Erday, a law firm employee who craned her neck to watch as the clock was turned off. Yesterday, the numbers moved slowly - and downward. The national debt has actually decreased since the beginning of the year, what with budget surpluses and the first buybacks of government debt in 70 years. The government has said that the entire S3.6 trillion of the national debt held by the public could be wiped out by 2013 under current projections for budget surpluses. "Today, we reached a symbolic moment in the improvement of our nation's fiscal situation," President Clinton said in a statement. "The Debt Clock was a constant reminder of the enormous challenge we faced." In its last moments, the sign read: "Our national debt: S5,676,989,904,887. Your family share: 573,733." CREATIVE Continued from Page 1 loft the beds because of a slant in the ceiling. Ray uses banana boxes as storage space in her closet and reserves the space under her bed for clothes. "My laundry basket is on top of the microwave. We hang stuff from everywhere. There's stuff all over the floor. It's quite messy," she said. Ray said the walls are the only area of her room that is bare. "We're a little lacking in the dec- orations. Our room resembles a prison cell," she said. Hanging up posters and Christ- mas lights was not a priority for LSA freshman Ralph Dilisio, a res- ident of West Quad. "Decorating was the last thing I thought about," said Dilisio, whose wall is adorned with a "Just in Case You Need an Excuse to Party" poster and bits of cardboard cov- ered with friends' phone numbers. Dilisio's floor is taken care of though. He pieced together a carpet from scraps he found in his base- ment, which happened to match a friend's dorm carpet from last year. "The color's really close, but they're different materials," he said. LSA freshman Matt Castle was lucky that he knew his three other roommates for their quad in Mary Marklev Residence Hall. MP3.com to go back online despite suit LOS ANGELES - MP3.com will reactivate its embattled online music service despite an ongoing copyright infringement tussle with Universal Music Group and the recording industry. The company's chief executive officer, Michael Robertson, said the My.Mp3.com service would be turned on sometime in the next few weeks, giving members access to music stored on its computers in San Diego. To access their music over the Internet, members must first prove they paid for the recording by briefly inserting a compact disc into a com- puter's CD-ROM drive. It was this service that first landed the company in court, accused by the five major record labels and the Recording Industry Association of America with illegally storing thou- sands of CDs and intentionally vio- lating copyrights. M P3.com has reached out-of- court settlements and signed licens- ing agreements with four of the five major record labels, but con- tinues to hold it has done nothing wrong. "Letting people listen to the'r own CD collection is a fair usi Robertson said yesterday. Moving men bound for space station CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - They're cable guys, movers, plumbers, electricians and mechanics all rolled into a single space station team. Seven astronauts and cosmona are scheduled to lift off on a flight the international space station today to install a toilet, set up a treadmill, lay cable and otherwise "turn this house into a home." Atlantis' I1-day voyage will be the first shuttle flight in alniost four months and the start of what NASA hopes will be a rapid-fire series of missions to the space station. "Very shortly, the station's going to come to life," said program mana* Tommy Holloway. A~ouN THEWORL French fuel protests halt transportation PARIS - Drivers hunted for the last drops of gasoline, school buses shut down routes and car rental agen- cies turned away customers yesterday as a crippling nationwide protest by French truckers over high fuel prices entered its fourth day. Many gas stations have been forced to hang "empty" signs after truckers sealed off the roads to nearly 100 of the country's oil refineries and fuel depots. After Britain, France has the highest gas taxes in the 15-nation European Union. Truckers say the price of diesel fuel in France has risen by 40 percent in the past year to S2.84 a gallon com- pared to an average of S1.58 a gallon in the United States. France has the second highest fuel prices in the European Union; about 75 percent of the cost of unleaded gasoline is tax. Some drivers went to great lengths to find fuel. At a Shell station in Paris yesterday, businessmanLouis Cheva- lier filled two plastic containers with gasoline as a favor for a colleague vis- iting from the central city of To. where fuel is scarce. "He's taking them back with him on the train tonight," Chevalier said. The Carrefour shopping chain said 80 percent of its gas stations outside Paris faced shortages. UN ends relief effort in West Timor JAKARTA, Indonesia - Fearing more attacks following the mob killing of three foreign aid workers, the United Nations evacuated its remaining relief staff from West Timor yesterday, leav- ing about 90,000 refugees without international assistance. The Indonesian government, pledg- ing to assert control in the troubled region, said 15 people had been arrested in Wednesday's slayings of the aid workers. - Compiled from Daily' wire reports. ,- . a,, s 4. o 4- 4 s.-. I 1 V I Why is TIAA-CREF the #1 choice nationwide? The TIAA- CREF Advantage. Call for ree Mformation Package (I i1 J1l4 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, star ting 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. 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