2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 31, 2001 NATION/WORLD Michigan senators oppose Ashcroft WASHINGTON (AP) - Michigan's two Democ- ratic senators said they will vote against President Bush's nominee for attorney general, Republican for- mer Sen. John Ashcroft. Although Ashcroft appears to have enough votes to win approval by the Senate as early tomorrow, many Democrats have announced their intention to vote against him because of his conservative views on civil rights, women's issues, homosexuals, abor- tion, gun control and the role of the judiciary. Sen. Debbie Stabenow of Lansing said she does not trust that Ashcroft would uphold the mission of the Justice Department, citing his outspoken opposi- tion to abortion rights and school desegregation. Sen. Carl Levin of Detroit said he would vote against Ashcroft because his rhetoric has been "extreme, divisive and unfair." Ashcroft foes have said votes against his confirma- tion would send Bush a signal against nominating sim- ilarly conservative nominees for federal judgeships. Bush voiced frustration yesterday with the contin- uing opposition to Ashcroft, who lost his re-election bid in November to deceased Democratic Missouri Gov. Mel Carnahan. Carnahan's widow, Jean Carna- han, filled the seat. The Senate Judiciary Committee sent Ashcroft's nomination to the full Senate yesterday by a vote of 10-8. Senate Republican leader Trent Lott said he hoped for a final vote by tomorrow and expressed confidence that Ashcroft would be confirmed. v APPLE Continued from Page 1I "Everything he teaches you really sticks with you. He takes you into the field and he tries to give you the bigger picture. You really take that with you," " Pierce said. Barnes used his prized find, the largest organism in the world, a forest of Aspen Clone trees near Fish Lake in Colorado, to demonstrate interconnec- tions in the environment The forest of aspens derive from the same genes and are connected through their roots, weighing a total 13 billion pounds. The "professor being honored is in a class of his own," said S.H.O.U.T. Director Jordan Goodman, who read from one student's nomination while introducing Barnes. "I feel a drive in his class to perform as well as possible, not only for myself, but so I don't let him down," the letter read. Jamie Katz, Hillel program associate and staff advisor to S.H.O.U.T., said- preparation is what separates Golden Apple professors from their colleagues. "Students walk into a classroom one day. They find a teacher who turns them on like they've never been turned on before," Katz said. SNRE graduate student Ryan O'Con- nor said Barnes' classes carry a reputa- tion of being both challenging and fun. "Everyday I found myself wonder- ing what new method he would unveil. Barnes is an excellent and inspiring teacher, but he is also a friend and mentor to the students," O'Connor said. SNRE senior Hanna Wingard values the time Barnes spends with his students. "He takes us to the Smokey Moun- tains. I don't know another professor who takes time out of his weekend time to take his students out of the class- room," Wingard said. FINANCE Continued from Page 1. One Democrat who said he is eager to speak with Schwarz about working on campaign finance reform is state Sen. Gary Peters (D-Bloomfield Twp.). "I'm pleased that he's working on a statewide organization," Peters said. This push for campaign finance reform needs to be bipartisan in order to succeed, Peters said, because in the past it has been a question of one party leveraging against another. Campaign finance reform is badly needed in Michigan, Peters added. "There is so much special interest money in the process that tends to dic- tate which issues get on the agenda," he said, adding that he is not implying that votes are being bought, just that the funds tend to skew what issues get looked at first. One thing Schwarz and Peters can easily agree on is that it is time for cam- paign finance reform to find a spot in both the national and state law books. "Campaign finance reform is a criti- cal issue in Michigan as it is across the country," Peters said. "It's becoming obscene how much money is neces- sary to run for political office." The national bill, which will come to the floor in March, is likely to pass this time around, Schwarz said. "Sena- tor McCain has the votes in the U.S. Senate;' he said. Though Schwarz does not think a state campaign finance reform bill will be introduced until the spring, the for- mation of the committee coincides with the Arizona senator's efforts to spread the word about the issue along- side the bill's co-sponsor Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.). The two began a six-state tour Mon- day by holding a town meeting in Lit- tle Rock, Ark. NEWS IN BRIEF.; WASHINGTON Bush plots tax strategy with Congress President Bush and his treasury secretary expressed confidence yesterday that Congress will approve the massive tax cut at the center of Bush's economic pro- gram. "As soon as possible," the president said was his aim. Hoping to build momentum, Bush and Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill held strategy session at the White House with Republican leaders from the House an# Senate and received encouragement for their efforts to pass a $1.6 trillion 10-year tax reduction. Senate Republican leader Trent Lott said after the meeting, "We fully expect to have significant tax relief for Americans before the Fourth of July recess." Declaring that he wanted to see the package approved "as soon as possible;" Bush said he was open to suggestions on legislative strategy. "We did discuss the timing of the tax package, how best to move it through the House," Bush said. "We are interested in success." Though Bush has talked of his proposal mostly in terms of returning surplus fed- eral revenue to taxpayers, he and his advisers also have suggested a tax cut could be helpful to the weakening national economy. Federal Reserve policy-makers we considering fresh interest-rate reductions yesterday to spur the economy, five da after Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan gave his blessing to a rate reduction. AHMEDABAD, India Pakistan aids quake relief efforts in India Pakistan put aside its bitter rivalry with India yesterday and joined earthquake relief efforts, but heavy equipment and explosives brought in to clear debris signaled that hope of finding survivors had all but vanished. Experts say few people could survive more than 100 hours buried in rubble le by Friday's temblor, and much of the attention shifted to getting tents, blankets medical care to the living. Officials have counted 7,148 bodies, but estimates of how high the death toll could rise varied widely. Defense Minister George Fernandes estimated 100,000 may have died; Home Minister Haren Pandya said he believed the figure to be between 15,000 and 20,000. Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee said it was impossible and improper to guess. Aid from around the world was pouring into western India: a 747 loaded with water purification equipment from the United States, a $500,000 mobile hospital from Denmark and an air force plane filled with tents and blankets from Pakistan. With nighttime temperatures about 41 degrees in the quake zone, blankets were a high priority. .......................................-..... .- .. Looks gto PARTY for e Spr' a k 200 ~1 ? STS has guara pdelo thMowing desinations:: BAHAM MEXfCO LORIDAe * awR Front MQ, - Starting @ 499 1 rc' 1 d a rl ou O AL _ \, St'avel'CO Pu o Starting @ 649 e l800648-4849 611 S . Space in umitedllj ......................m.m.M .m.. ...... m... mm. m. m mM Yp IDEA OF ~®"SLI M-4FIT" JEANS Slightly different music, because you're slightly different. A look at the underside of U of M www.universitysecrets.com pSCOREKPEEPERS Sportsgrill &.Pu SACRAMENTO, Calif. Emergency power may cost $1.3 billion California could be out at least $1.3 billion for emergency electricity before lawmakers construct a long-term fix to the state's botched deregulation program. Lawmakers want to negotiate a deal for wholesale electricity contracts for up to 10 years to avoid a power crunch in the coming decade. The state took just 12 days to spend $400 million approved earlier this month by the Legislature to buy electricity for financially strapped Southern California Edison and Pacific Gas & Electric. Both have been denied credit by suppliers, and say they are $12.7 bil- lion in debt because of soaring whole- sale power prices. The state's deregulation law bars them from recouping their costs from customers. Gov. Gray Davis ordered the state Monday to spend up to $400 million to buy power with money from the Depart- ment of Water Resources budget. WASHINGTON Norton, Whitman confirmed by Senate New Jersey Gov. Christie Whitman and former Colorado Attorney General Gale Norton won Senate approval yes- terday to. direct the nation's environ- mental and natural resources policies. The Senate voted unanimously 99-0 to confirm Whitman as administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency after voting 75-24 minutes earlier, along partisan and geographi- cal lines, to accept President Bush's choiceof Norton to be secretary of the interior. Most of those opposing Norton were Senate Democrats from Eastern states. Her most vocal support came from Senate Republicans in Western states with a large percentage of fed- eral-owned lands. The votes left all of Bush's Cabir seats but that of attorney genera filled just 10 days after his inaugura- tion. LONDON Doctors accused of stealing organs One of the leading children's hospi- tals in Britain illegally harvested heart brains, eyes and other organs fro thousands of dead children without the consent of their parents, according to a government report published yesterday. The report blamed a rogue patholo- gist at Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool for systematically removing "every organ from every child who had a post-mortem" between 1988 and 1995. But investigators also found stoc@ piled body parts, including the head of an Il-year-old boy, at the hospital and a Liverpool University research center that predated the term of Dutch pathologist Dick van Velzen. And a separate organ census issued by the Health Department yesterday indicat- ed that removing body parts without "informed consent" is common in English hospitals. - Compiled from Daily wire report tPNga lo Q/ S T 0 L 75d CALL DRINKS B E A m GODHEAD 2000 rears Of Human Error FRIDAY "I IImI I u I WESTON The Messed Albert Sounds 27 Taps! Full Menu! BOTTLES Only 750 SATURDAY 31 ANARD 9.10 2O&VERWIH PPR 1 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 $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 48109-1327. 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Peters STAFF: Kristen Beaumont, Anna Clark, Courtney Crimmins, Laura Deneau, Uzzie Ehrle, Whitney Elliott, Jen Fish, Samantha Ganey, Jewel Gopwani, Ahmed Hamid, Lisa Hoffman, Elizabeth.Kassab, Jane Kruil, Hanna LoPatin, Susan Luth, Louie Meizlish, Jacquelyn Nixon, James Restivo, Stephanie Schonholz, Nika Schulte, Karen Schwartz, Maria Sprow, Carrie Thorson, Johanna Wetmore, Jaimie Winkler. CALENDAR: Lindsey Alpert; GRAPHICS: Scott Gordon EDITORIAL Michael Grass, Nicholas Woomer, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Peter Cunniffe, Manish Raiji, Josh Wickerham STAFF: Ryan Blay, Kevin Clune, Sumon Dantiki, Rachel Fisher, Lea Frost, Rob Goodspeed, Jessica Guerin, Justin Hamilton, Johanna Hanink. Aubrey Henretty, Henry Hyatt, Shabina Khatri, Waj Syed, Ben Whetsel. CARTOONISTS: Dane Barnes, Aaron Brink, Chip Cullen, Thomas Kulgurgis, Jason Polan. COLUMNISTS: Emily Achenbaum, Gina Hamadey, David Horn, Chris Kula, Branden Sanz, Dustin Seibert, Mike Spahn, Amer Zahr. SPORTS Jon Schwartz, Managing Edit SENIOR EDITORS: Raphael Goodstein, Michael Kem, Joe Smith, Dan Williams NIGHT EDITORS: Kristen Fidh, Arun Gopal, Steve Jackson, Jeff Phillips, Ryan C. Moloney, Benjamin Singer. STAFF: Rohit Shave, Michael Bloom, Chris Burke, Kareem Copeland, David Den Herder, Chris Duprey, Mark Francescutti, Rhonda Gilmer, Richard Haddad, David Horn, Nick Kacher, Adam Kaplan, Shawn Kemp, Albert Kim, Seth Klempner, Adam McQueen, Nathan Linsley, Peter Lund, James Mercier, Stephanie Offen, Swapnii Patel, Eric Powell, David Roth, Naweed Sikora, Jeb Singer. ARTS Ben Goldstein, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jennifer Foge, Robyn Melained WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: lani len, glilabeth Pensler SUB-EDITORS: Lyle Henretty (Film), Jim Schiff (Fine/Performing Arts), Usa Rat (Books), Jeff Dickerson (TV/New Media), Luke Smith (Music). STAFF: Charity Atchison, Gautam Baksi, Matthew Barret, Ryan Blay, Leslie Boxer, Rob Brode, Christopher Cousino, Katie Den Bleyker, Kiran Divvela, GebFeudi, Melissa Gollob, MattG randstaff, Joshua Gross, Christian Hoard, Chris Kula, Jenny Jeltes, Matt ManserWillhelmina Mauritz, Sheila McClear, W. JacariMelton, Shannon O'Sullivan, Box Oxenburg, Darren Ringel, Dustin Seibert, Jacquelene Smith, Andy TayxrFabe, Kelly Vile, John UN. PHOTO Louis Brown, Jessica Johnson, Edito ASSOCIATE EDITORS: David Katz, Maujorle Marshall ARTS EDITOR: Abby Rosenbaum STAFF: Rachel Feierman, Tim Feldkamp, Justin Fitzpatrick, Sam Hollenshead, Jeff Hurvitz, Michael Hynes, Joyce Lee, Danny Moloshok, Brendan O'Donnell, Brad Quinn, Abby Rosenbaum, Brandon Sedloff, Khang Tran, Ellie White, Alex Woik, Alyssa Wood. ONLINE Kiran Divvela, Paul Wong, Managing Editors STAFF: Rachel Berger, Usa Cencul, Dana M. Goldberg, Sommy Ko, Mark McKinstry Vince Sust. 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