2A -The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 13, 2000 NATION/WORLD DEBATE Continued from Page 1A the strange turn of events on Elec- tion Day and the actions of the can- didates in the aftermath. On the topic of the ballot in Palm Beach County, Fla., the partisan lines between Rivers and Schwarz were clearly drawn as each defended their own candidate. Many residents in the traditionally liberal county have claimed they mistakenly voted for Reform Party candidate Pat Buchanan instead of Vice President Al Gore. Pending the result of a hand recount in Palm Beach, Gore has threatened to take the election to the courts, while Bush has already filed an injunction to stop the hand-counting process. Asked by the audience Friday where Buchanan's federal funding went, Rivers joked, "That's the question: What happened to that money ? Well, he must have spent it in Palm County." Buchanan received more than 3,400 votes in the county - thousands more than anywhere else in Florida -- and voters have blamed the layout of the ballot for creating confusion. Rivers said the events in Palm Beach County should be examined and said Republicans would feel likewise if the situation were reversed. The legality of the ballot "only matters when it could change the outcome of the election," she said, as is the case in this year. Schwarz said he wants to see the election come to a speedy conclusion. "It shouldn't go to the courts," he said. "Once in the courts, always in the courts," Schwarz said. "If Bush's lead holds (in Florida), Al Gore should concede, and vice versa," he said. RECOUNT Continued from Page 1A enormous to accept whatever results Florida has reached." The Bush team dispatched an "urgent message" by e-mail yesterday asking supporters for up to 55,000 to help finance the recount campaign. Democrats are hoping to raise S3 mil- lion, with top Gore aides moving from his headquarters in Tennessee to Democratic offices in Washington. Among the weekend developments: Palm Beach County, Fla., election officials added three dozen additional .votes to Gore early yesterday in a marathon mechanical recount. Leaders of the Democratic stronghold then decided to manually check each of the 425,000 votes cast. One top county official said he will try to block the move. Officials said their manual recount of precincts representing I percent of" the vote turned up 19 votes for Gore beyond a machine count. Carol Roberts, a county commissioner and a member of the Palm Beach County Researchers and professionals Need a job and independence? Check: americagreencard.com canvassing commission, argued that a manual recount of 100 percent of the precincts could potentially change as many as 1,900 additional votes - far more than the existing statewide mar- gin between the two candidates. * In Deland, Fla., Volusia County officials began a manual recount of all 184,018 ballots, despite Bush's pending request to stop it. With Democratic- laden Daytona Beach included, Gore's team hoped to pick up more votes. * Polk County, Fla., officials, res- canning ballots by machine for a third day, found an additional 104 votes for Bush and seven for Gore. Home to Lakeland, the county went for Bush. * Democrats added Osceola County to their list of hand recount requests. Gore had a small lead over Bush in the 54,000-plus votes cast in the county just south of Orlando. Hispanic voters alleged they were required to produce two forms of identification when only one was required. * Bush had a 17-vote lead in New Mexico, where state police have begun impounding ballots from Tuesday's election. R wECYCLEN TOHELa DAIL'' e AC? ,-1. NATION Clinton's meeting with Barak delayed WASHINGTON - President Clinton was making another appeal yesterday to end the violence in the Middle East, meeting at the White House with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak three days after a visit with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.. Barak, whose trip was delayed after twice reversing his plane's course due-to a hijacking crisis at home, has offered little hope the meeting could help end t bloodshed that has killed nearly 200 people in the past six weeks. The violence has shattered what remained of Clinton's hopes for a settlement before his term ends in January. Arafat, who held discussions Thursday with the president, indicated afterward that he would consider another Middle East summit, with Clinton as host, pro- vided it was well-prepared "to ensure its success." And that, the Palestinian leader said, meant on accord on both Jerusalem and refugees. Barak has refused to turn over East Jerusalem to the Palestinians, but offered them a larger role in running their dailyaffairs in Israel's declared capital. He has called a time-out in peacemaking until the violence ends. Yesterday's meeting was set for early afternoon but was pushed back int6 the evening because of the hijacking. A Russian airliner headed to Moscow o domestic flight was seized by a Chechen man who surrendered after diverti the plane to Israel's southern desert. The 57 passengers and crew were all safe, officials said. ~iutinkju.u.pregan4 PRBEMPEGACY LP ' 9754357 A- t :an dy.4 o.s I $1.1 Billion Hedge Fund Analyst Position Job Responsibilities: valuation analysis, meeting with management teams and research analysts, investment idea origination Requirements: solid academic background, detail oriented, ability to work under pressure, strong interest in equity markets K Capital, based in Boston, is a value oriented, special situation fund that invests opportunistically in European and U.S. securities on a long and short basis. Investment strategy is focused on restructurings, liquidations, and various types of arbitrage. K Capital was formed in April 1999 and has returned 93% since inception. Please submit cover letter and resume by November 17 to Anup Khandelwal via email at recruiting Pkcapitalpartners.com. Please include "Analyst Position" as the email subject. Unsettled election could stall Congress WASHINGTON - Lame-duck sessions of Congress are -always unpredictable, but the one starting this week could prove even more muddled because of the unsettled presidential election. Neither party's congressional leaders know whether it makes sense to resolve budget fights quickly or try delaying a deal until the next administration - with either Republican George W. Bush or Democrat Al Gore in the White I louse on Jan. 20, inauguration day. Top Democrats seem ready to settle and leave town quickly. With their ally, President Clinton, still in office, they appear eager to shake hands on a huge education, health and labor bill that was nearly completed before Congress left town on Nov. 3 for the elections. "There's an array of issues that have to be addressed. I don't think we can leave without having addressed them," Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle, (D-South Dakota), said yesterday on CBS' "Face the Nation." Earlier, he said, "It will take give on both sides, but I think we can do that." Five of the 13 annual spending bills for fiscal 2001, which began Oct. 1, are hanging. They cover seven Cabi- net departments, dozens of smaller agencies, congressional operatio and the District of Columbia's budget. Internet group may add 44 new suffixes MARINA DEL REY, Calif. - To relieve overcrowding in dot-coin addresses, the international organiza- tion in charge of Internet names could select several new suffixes by week's end. The move would represent tl first major expansion of Web names since the existing structure was deyel- oped in the 1980s. The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers begins a four-day meeting today to consider 44 proposed suffixes. Adding new suf- fixes is like adding new telephone area codes to accommodate growth. More than 24 million names are register under.com,.net and .org. 4 -: *; _ °4 4 4 4 4,. 4- 4 &. S " 'a l R, sn- '. AROUND THE WORLD :: / EE-,A1 KDg C;O~VNfc2 vIN H^vE EVEP,. HEARD OP AA& tRioiUocY C&0Af9. U.S. military planes collide; pilot missing TOKYO - Two U.S. military jets collided over waters off north- ern Japan early today, the Japanese Coast Guard said. One pilot was rescued but the other was missing. The F-16s collided off Oshima Island, 410 miles north of Tokyo, said Toshifumi Nishikawa, spokesman for the Coast Guard based in Otaru, on nearby Hokkai- do Island. Both the pilots apparently ejected from their planes and one of them was rescued from the water by the Japanese Air Self-Defense Force, said Toshimi Okimoto, a JASDF spokesman. There were no other people aboard. The survivor's name and condi- tion were not immediately known, Okimoto said. The other pilot was still missing, and a search - including U.S. forces and Japanese Coast Guard helicopters and ships - was under way. The two jets, based at Misawa U.S. Air Base, were participating in a joint U.S.-Japan military exergise the U.S. military said in a sta ment. The U.S. statement said-the condition of the pilots 'was unknown. and provided no futther details. Leah Rabin dies from cancer battle JERUSALEM - Leah Rabin, w became an outspoken campaigner or peace after her husband, the late Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, was struck down by an assassin's bullet, died yesterday of cancer. She was 12: Mrs. Rabin had never hesitated to criticize friend or foe in the five years since her husband was shot by an ultranationalist Jew. Though viewed by some of her countrymen as a divi- sive figure, she was feted abroad as a promoter of Israeli-Arab coexisten.c - Comlpiledfiom Daily iire reports. DA Fi S' RT Cr D CU^CHED ONW II wee -CITY LUS ANGELES. IN A' Zf~lIri'g S i 139V Z o OF~ His 2Tu gTD GNMrgTO SCo- i - A ONI ?"H G~KAA1 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter term( 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 Dally. 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor. Michigan 48109-1327. * PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY: Arts 763-0379: Sports 647-3336: Opinion 764-0552: Circulation 764-0558: classified advertising 764-0557: Display advertising 764-0554: Billing 764-0550. E mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: www.michigandaidy.com. E 1 .A F k Ip Edi C NEWS Jewel Gopwani, Managing Editor EDITORS: Nick Bunkley, Michael Grass, Nika Schutte, laimie Winkler AF s, Aion Knsten Beaumont. Anna Clark. Laura Deneau. Lizzie Ehre. Whitney Eliot. David Enders. Jen Fish. Robert Gold. K a. . c n Lisa Hoffman. Eizabeth Kassab. Jodie Kaufman. Yael Kohen. Lisa Koivu. Jane Kru. Hanna LoPatin. Susan Luth, J3Cqurlyn Non. Coten Nish, Jeremy W. Peters. Natalie Plosky. James Resto. Karen Schwartz. Tara D. Sharma. Maria Sprow. Carrie Thorson. Joharrn Wetmore CA LENDAR: Lindsey Alpert: GRAPHICS: Scott Gordon EDITORIAL Emily Achenbaum, Managing Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Peter Cunniffe, Ryan DePietro, Josh Wickerham, Nicholas Woomer ST AFF: Dane Bares. Ryan Blay. Kevin Clune. Chip Culien. Sumon Dantiki. Seth Fisher. Lea Frost. Rob Goodspeed. Jessica Guerrn. Aubrey Henretty. Henry Hyatt. Shabina Khatri. Patrick Kiley. Cortney Konner. Chris Kula. Thomas Kuburgis. Chrrstine Lambert. Erin McQuinn. Del Mendez. Manish RaiJi, Branden Sanz. Rachael Smith. Wai Syed. Katie Tibaidr. SPORTS David Den Herder, Managing Editor SENIOR EDITORS: Chris Duprey, Mark Francescutti, Geoff Gagnon, Stephanie Offen N ah l Goodstein. Arun Gopal. Michaei Kern. Ryan C. Moloney. Jon Schwar tz, Dan Wiliams STAFF: hohit 'hve. Michael Bloom. Chris Burke. Kareem Copeland. Sam Duwe. Kristen Fidh. Rhonda Gilmer. Richard Haddad. Brac Hoffmnn. Drud Horn. Steve Jackson. Nick Kacher. Shawn Kemp. Albert Kim. Nathan Lnsiey. Peter Lund. James Mercier. David Mosse. J is. Piihs Erc Powell. David Roth. Naweed Sikora. Benjamin Singer. Jeb Singer. Joe Smith. ARTS Gabe Fajuri, Chris Kula, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Ben Goldstein WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Jenni Glenn, Elizabeth Pensier SiUED 'DRy:Matt barrett (Fimt Robyn Melared (Fine/Perorming Arts), Gina Hamadey(Books, Jennifer FogeliTV; New Medial John UhliMusici. STAF Gauam Baks Ryan Blay, Lesie Boxer. Rob Brode, Joe Chang. Chistopher Cousno. Kate Den Beyker, Rick Derns. Jeff Dickerson. Kiran ivvtela Messa G ahlob. Joshua Gross. Lyle Henretty. Christian Hoard. Elena Lipson. Jenny Jeltes. Matt Manser. Willhelmina Mauritz. Sheiia M W;. Jrl Melton. Shannon O Sullivan, Lisa Raji, Darren Ringel Jim Schiff..Jac uelene Smith, Luke Smith. Andy Taylor-Fabe. Kelly vie. PHOTO Louis Brown, Jessica Johnson, Editoir ASSOCIATE EDITORS: David Katz, Marjorie Marshall ARTS EDITOR: Peter Cornue STAFF: Peter Cornue Rachel Feierman, Justin Fitzpatrick. Sam Hollenshead. Jeff Hurvitz. Michael Hynes. Joyce Lee. Carrie McGee. Danny Moloshok. Norman Ng, Brendan O Donnell. Joanna Paine. Brad Quinn. Abby Rosenbaum. Brandon Sedioff. lle White. Alex Wolk, Alyssa Wood' ONLINE Rachel Berger, Paul Wong, Managing Editors STAFF: Kran Divvela. Dana M. Goldberg, Sommy Ko, Mark McKinstry Vince Sust. CONSULTANT. Saadru Pramanik mop-C }Y C Hlw. COME tlX^W"ANUN 0YOU C^N rJJOINJ THE CORPf Pt Of'OTfT^~DINrC ANxOD iVER-fE RECENTj'rco"LECE GAD%)TEf Oup AW. C^DEMIkC M^JOR-F kHO COMMIT TWO Yc'tA#. 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