2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 22, 2001 NATION WORLD Ousted Estrada to e investigated PfIILLIPINES (AP) - Prosecutors said today they were launching a criminal investigation into former President Joseph Estrada for allegedly plundering mil- lions of dollars in office. The announcement came as Estrada's replacement, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, was putting together her government, trying to ease divisions in the country caused by the months of political crisis that ended this weekend with the former movie actor's removal from office. Estrada opponents had been demanding that, even after his ouster, he face trial on the corruption charges that led to his impeachment trial last month. When that Senate trial collapsed last week, mass street protests frced Estrada to quit. THie top charge that Estrada could face in the new investigation canies a possible death penalty - but it was considered extremely unlikely that the former head of state could face execution by lethal injection. Government ombudsman Aniano Desierto told a news conference that the preliminary investiga- tion would take 60 days and involve six charges: Plunder, misuse of funds, violations of the anti- graft law, perjury, bribery and possession of unex- plained wealth. Economic plunder is defined as stealing from the state. There are different categories, with different sets of,penalties, depending on the amounts of money involved. The most seriousis a capital offense No order was immediately issued barring Estrada from leaving he country, but his name was put on a "watch" list at the country's airports. Desierto said investigators would use all of the pro- ceedings at the impeachment trial and would seek access to bank records that prosecutors in the Senate trial were blocked from viewing. Prosecutors in the impeachment trial had said those records would show Estrada had millions of dollars hidden away, earned from corrupt activities. When senators voted to prevent their release tomorrow, the prosecutors resigned - triggering street protests that swelled over the next three days to some 250,000 peo- ple. Estrada's legal status remained murky. He reported- ly did not sign an official resignation when he left office. When he finally exited the presidential palace on Saturday, he went to his private residence in the Manila suburb of San Juan. SHOW Continued from Page 1A Impact group performed the lyrics of the song "Testify to Love" in sign lan- guage. The dancers of the Cari- bRhythms group donned brightly colored costumes individually designed for each person. They danced to reggae and soca and mellow remixes of contemporary pop hits from the likes of the Backstreet Boys. Encompass seeks to be "a truly diverse show" said Abheshek Narain, co-chair of the organization. "They do it in a very exciting way - very explosive and dynamic," said Art and Design senior Sung Yi, who attend- ed the show. "There were so many different eth- nicities. It wasn't just for one group," said LSA freshman Sangeetha Varanasi, who performed "The East: Unveiled," a dance showing a mixture of Eastern and Western cultures. Narain said that most students are not aware of other ethnic groups on campus, and part of Encompass' goal is to expose students to cultures they would not ordinarily see. "We strive to achieve diversity on this campus, and we strive to achieve multi- culturalism on campus," Narain said. 'It really does show something about other cultures, Engineering sophomore Neeru Khanna said. Otherwise, she admitted, "I would never see a Persian dance" Narain said that people of differ- ent backgrounds gain valuable insights from each other, and that is an integral part of what Encompass tries to do. "There is more to campus and more to life than the groups you traditionally stick with," Narain said. Encompass was founded three years ago by a group of students who saw a lack of diversity on campus and were committed to changing that. Their goal was to bring together students of differ- ent backgrounds who would not nor- mally interact. TRIAL Continued from Page 1A Using the example of a teeter-totter, Raudenbush said it doesn't matter if a "football player or a baby" is the weight that tips the teeter-totter in one direction, what matters is that it is tipped at all. But CIR lead counsel Kirk Kolbo argued that these numbers do prove that race is a large factor in admissions. "He essentially proved our case," Kolbo said. If race does not matter, he said, then the probability of minorities should not drop as much as Rauden- bush calculated. Deputy General Counsel Liz Barry said CIR is "confusing the impact of considering race with the weight" that race has in admissions decisions. Also testifying Friday was Dennis Shields reiterated the University's contention that the admissions poli- cies of the Law School are not dependent on race, and that race is "just one of the factors you take into account." He also said that he had never had any conversations with then-Law School Dean Lee Bollinger about how many underrepresented minorities were to be admitted. Also on Friday, U.S. District Judge Bernard Friedman denied a motion by CIR to exclude the testi- mony of eight witnesses for the intervening defendants. Kolbo argued that these witnesses were designated to address the educa- tional benefits of diversity, a ques- tion that was not before the court. Friedman ruled that he would allow the witnesses, but warned intervenor counsel that he was "only going to allow that which is relevant." Law School Dean Jeffrey Lehman and Vanderbilt Law School Dean Kent Syverud are scheduled to testify today, clearing the way for the intervenors to begin their case on Tuesday. 1 1 1 1 ACROSS THE NAIN Blackouts continue in northern Calif. SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Limited areas of northern California were blacked out yesterday after demand for electricity overwhelmed power grid operators for the third day in less than a week. The outages, affecting up to 75,000 customers in the Sacramento, Roseville, Turlock and Modesto areas, lasted about 20 minutes. The Independent System Operator - which manages 80 percent of the state s electricity grid - earlier had declared a Stage 3 alert through today, an unprece- dented action on weekends when demand usually eases. Stage 3 alerts are announced when reserves dipped below 1.5 percent and allow the grid operators to impose rolling blackouts to cope with demand. Blackouts imposed Wednesday and Thursday in northern and central Califor- nia darkened hundreds of thousands of homes and business for up to two hours. The state avoided another round of blackouts on Friday and Saturday. The outages yesterday occurred in areas served by municipal utility districts, from northeast of Sacramento to southern Stanislaus County about 120 miles to the south. The rest of Northern California was not affected. ISO spokeswoman Stephanie McCorkle said the limited blackouts w ordered to save power in the state's stressed grid, and it was unknown whetr further outages would be ordered. "We've been on such low reserves all weekend," McCorkle said. MCCain to introdUCe With gains from the November elec- tions and an endorsement from Missis- reform bill today sippi Sen. Thad Cochran, a Republican stalwart who previously opposed the WASH INGTON - Sen. John measure, supporters of the effort appear McCain, (R-Ariz) will throw down the to have the 60 votes needed to ov - gauntlet to President Bush and Republi- come a GOP filibuster. can congressional leaders on campaign finance reform today with reintroduc- Clinton pardons tion of legislation to reduce the flow of special-interest cash into political cam- historic in measure paigns. Armed with increasing support, LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - Susan McCain said in a television interview McDougal is looking forward to a yesterday he wants to work in concert new life now that she has a pardon with Bush and other GOP leaders but from President Clinton excusing her will insist on early action, even if it for her Whitewater-related crimes. means tying up the Senate as a "last "I get a fresh start, and it's a great resort" to force a vote. ing" Clinton's former Whitewaterob "I believe that we can work together ness partner said after he freed her from on this but we know that delay is death" the burden of four fraud convictions. for the long-stalled legislation, McCain McDougal was among 140 people said on NBC's "Meet the Press." Clinton pardoned in a mix of personal McCain made campaign finance a and historic acts of clemency onSat- centerpiece of his campaign against Bush urday just before leaving office. for the GOP presidential nomination last Others receiving pardons incuded year. While he lost the nomination fight, Patty Hearst Shaw, former Arizona the reform cause picked up steam and Gov. Fife Symington and Clintos McCain returned to the Senate more own brother, Roger, who was con - determined than ever to pass a bill. ed on drug charges in 1984. - AROUND THE WORLD Thousands gather to generals wheeled the casket along a red carpet. Above the din of a brass mourn slain leader band, the wails of several of Kabila's relatives could be heard while ots KINSHASA, Congo - Thousands sobbed quietly, muffling their c s of mourners gathered in the streets of with handkerchiefs. this crumbling capital yesterday to "We came because we really feel welcome the return of slain President sorrow," said Ekanga Germaine, a 31- Laurent Kabila. His remains, enclosed year-old woman who stood outside the in an ivory coffin carried atop an open airport as the procession rode by.- trailer, arrived in Kinshasa less than four years after he led rebels on a tri- ral11 1 with umphant march through the city after laks beglinwt they had swept across the country and slim hopes of peac ousted its longtime despot, Mobutu Sese Seko. TA BA, Egypt - With Israeli and The state airplane bearing Kabila's Palestinian teams set to make a major body landed here at midday and was push for a peace breakthrough at this met by supporters - many of them Egyptian resort, both sides gave off sig- wearing T-shirts with Kabila's image nals yesterday that dampened the printed on them - who lined the 25- already slim hopes for success. mile route from N'djili airport into the In Israel, Prime Minister Ehud Barak city to the People's Palace, where his set lines he pledged never to cross, and body will lie in state until his funeral senior Palestinian negotiator Saeb tomorrow. Erekat said the Israeli stance meant the Kabila's 31-year-old son Joseph, "failure of these negotiations before who will be sworn in as president fol- they begin." lowing the burial, walked behind the casket on the airport's tarmac as army - Conpiledjiom Daily wire reports. The M chigan Daily (ISSN 0745.967) Is publshed Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscp tions for fal term, starting in September. va 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 Daily. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 481091327. 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.lefters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: www.michigandally.com. 1 / S . I , It rinC ef NEWS Jewel Gopwani, Managing Editor EDITORS: Nick Bunkley, Nika Schulte, Jaimie Winkler STAFF Kristen Beaumont. Anna Clark. Courtney Crimmins. Laura Deneau. Lizzie Ehrle. Whitney Elliott. David Enders Jen Fish. Lisa Hoffman, Elzabeth Kassab. isa Koivu, Jane Krull. Hanna LoPatm. Susan Luth. Louie Meizlish. Jacquelyn Nixon, Caitli Nish. Jeremy W. Peters. James Restive. Stephanie Schonhoiz. Karen Schwatz. Maria Sprow, Carrie Thorson. Johanna Wetmore. CALENDAR. Lindsey Alpert: GRAPHICS. Scott Gordon EDITORIAL Emily Achenbaum, Managing Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Peter Cunniffe, Michael Grass, Manish Raiji. Josh Wickerham, Nicholas Woomer STAFF. Dane Barnes. Ryan Slay. Kein Clone, Cnip Culen. Sumon Dantiki Rachel Fisher. Lea Frost. Rob Goospeed, Jessica Guerin, Justin Hamiton. Johanna Hanink, Aubrey Henretty. Henry Hyatt. Shabina Khatn. Patrick Kiley. Chris Kula, Thomas Kuljurgis. Chnsj * Lambert Erin McQumnn. Jason Polan, Branden Sanz. Rachael Smith. Waj Syed. SPORTS David Den Herder, Managing Editor SENIOR EDITORS: Chris Duprey, Mark Francescdtti, Geoff Gagnon, Stephanie Ofden NIGHT EDITORS Raphael Goodstein. Arun Gocal, Michael Kern. Ryan C. Moloney. Jon Schwartz. Dan Wiiiams. STAFF Ronit Bhave. Michael Bloom. Chris BurKe. Kareem Copeano Sam Duwe Arsten Fidh. Rhonda Gimer Richard Haddad Brad Hoffman. David Horn. Steve Jackson. Nick Kacner. Adam Kaplan Shawn Kemp. Albert Km Seth Klempner Adam McOueen, Nathan Linsley, Peter Lund, James Mercier. Swapnd Patel, Jeff Philips. Eric Poweli, David Roth. Naweeo Sikora. Benjamin Singer. Jeb Singer. Joe Smith. ARTS Ben Goldstein, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jennifer Fogel. Robyn Melamed WEEKEND. ETC. EDITORS: Jenni Glenn. Elizabeth Pensier SUBEDITORS:LyleHenrettyiFAmi. Lim SchifrFinerPefoing Artsi. Lisa Rait Booksi, JeffDickerson(TV/New Media.Luke SmithiMusic). STAFF: Charity Atchison. Gautam Baks, Matthew Barret. Ryan Blay. Leslie Boxer. Christopher Cousino. Katie Den Bleyker. Kiran Divvela. Gabe Fajuri. Melissa Gollob Matt Grandstaff. Joshua Gross Christian Hoard. Chris Kula. Jenny Jfeltes. Matt Manser, WilIhelmina Mauritz. Sheia McClear, W JacarlMelton. Shannon 'Sullin. Be Oxensrg Darren Ringel, DustinSeibert,Jacpselene Smith.Andy TaylorFae,. Kelly Vile.JohnoU PHOTO Louis Brown, Jessica Johnson, E rs ASSOCIATE EDITORS: David Katz, Marjorie Marshall ARTS EDITOR: Peter Comue STAFF Peter Corai Rachei Feierman. Justin Fitzpatrick. Sam Hollenshead Jeff Hurvrtz Michael Hynes. Joyce Lee. Carne McGee Danny Moisso~kNorman Ng, Brendan ODonneillioannaPaine BraoQunn Abby Rosenbaum.BrandonSedloff.ElbeWhite, Alex Wo i AvssaWood. ONCLINE Kiran Divvela, Paul Wong, Managing Editors ST A NT-"i y( r samenculaDuasaM. Goiner Snmm no. MarK MciinstryVnceust NC N ,S -L^ A,,ii.,,uivMir~6-n'.atdu ar ano,' t 1 I - WINTER. FOOTWEAR NEW YEARNEW SHOES (ON SALE) ATTENTION A LL MICHIGAN DAILY RE ADERS Brig in this ad and receive im extra 10% off our aready reduced sale prices. *HURRY -SALE ENDS SUNOAY~ JANUARY 28Th* Goodi Only On $ale Merchandisev Not Vaiid On Any PrIor .P..chases. A. . 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