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April 10, 2001 - Image 2

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 2001-04-10

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2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 10, 2001
NATION/wORLD
No en d in sight to standoff with China

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush cautioned
yesterday that the spy plane standoff may not end soon
- "diplomacy takes time" - and warned China that
relations with the United States could suffer.
As the nine-day showdown threatened to
become a political problem for Bush, U.S. diplo-
mats met for a fourth time with the crew of a
crippled EP-3E surveillance plane. The 21 men
and three women were doing fine, the president
reported, and administration officials said negoti-
ations for their release were progressing.

Nonetheless, Beijing insisted anew yesterday
that Washington apologize and take responsibili-
ty for the spy plane's March 31 collision with a
Chinese fighter jet. The White House said neither
demand was warranted, as frustration grew over
the slow pace of talks.
"Diplomacy takes time," Bush told reporters before a
Cabinet meeting about his plans for the federal budget.
"But there is a point - the longer it goes - there's a
point at which our relations with China could become
damaged."

U

TERM GRADES
IT'S NOT TOO LATE:

REGISTRAR'S BULLETIN BOARD
THE END OF THE TERM
Final grades are available to students on Wolverine Access
(wolverineaccess.umich.edu), on touch-tone (734-998-1645), or by ordering
unofficial transcript. Students who need a printed copy of their term grades
(with their name) may request one at a Student Services Site (1010 LSA
Building or 1212 Pierpont Commons). Picture ID is required at Student
Services.
If you have not yet registered for Spring, Spring-Summer, Summer &
Terms, you may still do so on Wolverine Access.

PLEASE NOTE: IN ACCORD WITH REGENT'S POLICY, STUDENTS WHO REGISTERE
SUBSEQUENTLY WITHDRAW (DROP ALL CLASSES) AFTER THE BEGINNING OF
TERM WILL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE REGISTRATION AND DISENROLLMENT F
THIS ASSESSMENT WILL BE MADE REGARDLESS OF WHETHER OR NOTI
ATTENDED ANY CLASSES.
If you wish to disenroll from a term and avoid all charges you should do so by the following dates:

SPRING
SPRING-SUMMER
SUMMER
FALL

April 30th
April 30th
June 26th
September 4th

},
t.
.i4

You can disenroll from the term prior to the first day of that term. To disenroll, you can send a letter1
Office of the Registrar, 1524 L.S.A. Bldg., 500 S. State St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109-1382, FAX the C
of the Registrar at (734) 763-9053 or send an e-mail to ro.crisp.questions@umich.edu. The letter,l
email must be postmarked no later than the corresponding deadline dates listed above to avoid all ch
or visit a Student Service Site.
HAVE A GREAT SUMMER. SEE YOU IN SEPTEMBER
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS WHILE YOU'RE AWAY, GIVE US A CALL.
There are two Student Service locations to serve you: 1010 LSA Bldg., phone (734) 647-3507
1212 Pierpont Commons, phone (734) 763-765(
Visit our WEB SITE - htRp://www.umich.edu/~regoff/
PLEASE NOTE - FALL CLASSES BEGIN WEDNESDAY - SEPTEMBER 5TH

Bush, who has issued similar warning to Beijing
before, broke new ground with the diplomacy-takes-
time formulation. Advisers said it was a plea for
patience aimed at conservatives who ratcheted up their
anti-China rhetoric over the weekend and began to
question his handling of the situation.
The president also hoped to prepare the public for the
possibility of protracted negotiations. Polls show voters
support Bush's performance on China, but senior
Republicans close to him said the good will could evap-
orate if the standoff continues much longer.
NAKED MILE
Continued from Page 1.
through the West Hall arch and
through the Diag, will change this
year, bringing runners down Washte-
naw Avenue to South University
Avenue instead.
Such a change in the route would
mean the entire run would be under
g an the jurisdiction of the Ann Arbor
only Police Department and not DPS.
Bollinger's e-mail also claims that
the "narrow pedestrian walkways
between (the Harlan Hatcher Gradu-
ate Library), Haven Hall and Tisch
Hall/Museum of Art will be closed
Fall off and access to and from the Diag
in that vicinity will be restricted."
DPS patrols all University-owned
AND areas and made 15 arrests last year,
THE Brown said, but none for indecent
EES. exposure.
YOU "Our citations tend to be for alco-
hol-related violations," Brown said.
AAPD officers patrol city and
street areas, especially along South
University. Last year AAPD arrested
three runners for indecent exposure
and another subject for malicious
destruction. Last year was the first
year AAPD arrested anyone for
indecent exposure, which is consid-
ered criminal sexual conduct. Per-
to the sons charged with CSC can be
ffice required to register on the National
FAX, Sex Offender Registry.
arges After a group of Livonia residents
sent a letter to Michigan Attorney
General Jennifer Granholm com-
plaining about the run last year, the
AAPD stated they would make
arrests for indecent exposure and
increase police presence. The AAPD
has not yet announced any plans for
0 this year's event.
As in previous years, the Michi-
gan Student Assembly will be pre-
sent at the run to promote runner
safety. LSA junior Elizabeth Ander-
son, chair of MSA's Women's Issues
Committee, said MSA hopes to have
300 student volunteers on hand to
- warn runners about street hazards,
keep the path clear and keep sexual
harassment and video taping to a
minimum.
MSA is holding a mass meeting
for anyone who is interested in vol-
unteering Thursday at 9 p.m. in the
Anderson Room of the Michigan
Union.
WALLENBERG
Continued from Page :
Moneo began his lecture with his lat-
est reflections on the direction modern
architecture is headed. Moneo
explained that in the past, architecture
and design was allied with political and
religious power with those who had the
money to fund large construction pro-
jects.
r "Power is no longer the ally of archi-
tecture, there has been greater architec-
tural freedom since the 1970s," Moneo
said.
Moneo stated that a key to architec-
ture is perceiving the work as a com-
pleted form. "Architecture only reaches

its true status when it is realized, when
it acquires its being as an object, and
when it is transformed into material
reality as a building."
Moneo said that in the modern era,
computers are seen as something that
will aid in this conceptualization of the
architectural plans as finished project.
"The new technology is no longer
related to building and resources, but
rather computers as tools in the design
process; Moneo said.
Finally, he discussed the architect's
duty in the coming years to work with
the changing urban landscape and lack
of space.
"We must accept the responsibility
we have for consolidating form,"
Moneo said.
Following his opening speech,
Moneo gave a slide presentation that
depicted models and pictures of his
work, and elaborated further on the his-
tory and theory behind architecture
IbM51n TEI4E E

JERUSALEM
R~estinian kifled in
excbag *of fire
A Palestinian was killed overnight
during an exchange of fire between
Israeli and Palestinian security forces
near the West Bank city of Ramallah,
Palestinians said yesterday, after the
Israeli army bombarded Palestinian tar-
gets in the Gaza Strip.
Israeli media reported that a meeting
of security commanders from the two
sides would take place later yesterday,
but neither side would confirm the
reports.
Israel's Internal Security Minister Uzi
Landau cast doubt on the value of fur-
ther talks with the Palestinians and
called Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's
police "terrorists."
Near Beitunia on the outskirts of
Ramallah, the body of Palestinian Tay-
seer el-Omolee was found yesterday.
Omolee was apparently caught in
cross fire Sunday night between Pales-
tinians and Israeli soldiers returning fire.
LONDON
hiternet twins to be
sent back to U.S.
The "Internet Twins" - born in.
America and adopted by a British cou-
ple through an online service - should
go home to have a court decide who
should raise them, a judge ruled yester-
day.
Justice Andrew Kirkwood ruled that
the 9-month-old girls should be
returned to Missouri, where their
estranged biological parents are seek-

NEWS IN BRIEF
EA L ESFR*OM AROUND THE WVORLD - J
WASHINGTON
Bush budget makes room for tax cut
President Bush targeted scores of federal programs yesterday to make room for
his $1.6 trillion tax cut, proposing to slash funds for urban police patrols, energy
conservation and pediatrician training.
"Washington is known for its pork. This budget funds our needs without the "
Bush told reporters as his administration sent Congress a 2,500-page documenW-
ing in the fine-print of the $1.96 trillion rudimentary budget he outlined in February.
Democrats balked, saying Bush's proposals would cut bone as well as fat, and
noted that the Senate already had repudiated part of Bush's tax plan by trimming
it back to $1.2 trillion.
Rep. John Spratt of South Carolina, the senior Democrat on the House Budget
Committee, cited "bewildering, curious cuts in this budget" and said he doubted
Bush could win even GOP support for some of the cuts.
Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle (D-S.D.) said the Senate last week
"rejected the framework on which today's plan is based ... This may be the
first budget in history that wasn't just dead on arrival - it was dead before
arrival."
Bush's budget for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1 would hold growth in di -
tionary spending to a 4 percent increase, far below this year's 8.7 percent increase.
WAsHINGTON
Bush chooses openly gay AIDS policy chief
President Bush has chosen an openly gay Wisconsin man to direct his adminis-
tration's policies on AIDS, the White House announced yesterday.
Bush selected Scott Evertz to head the new Office of National AIDS Policy, said
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer. Evertz, leader of the Log Cabin Republi-
cans in Wisconsin, is the first openly gay person nominated to an executive breh
office by a Republican president.
"The president picks the best people for their jobs, regardless of what their
backgrounds may or may not be, and that is why he has chosen Scott," Fleischer
said. "The president respects him. He will be welcome at this White House."
Evertz is a political ally of Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy
Thompson, former governor of Wisconsin.
The Human Rights Campaign, the country's largest gaypolitical group, praised
Evertz' appointment even while it criticized as inadequate the $1.8 billion allot-
ment for AIDS programs in Bush's fiscal 2002 budget proposal.
"We applaud President Bush for this appointment;" said Winnie Stachelberg,
the group's political director.

0
ing custody. The British couple Who
adopted the twins were considering
whether to appeal.
Kirkwood said the twins woukl be
placed in foster care in Missouri pend-
ing rulings there on their future, and he
said arrangements for taking them out
of Britain would be confidential.
Judith and Alan Kilshaw of Wales
brought the babies to Britain tl'
months ago after paying double theee
of that paid by a California couple who
also wanted to adopt them.
MONTPEUER, Vt.
Maine has highest
percentage ofwhites
John Tucker is sticking it out in Ver-
mont, but he isn't urging his three
grown children to join him.
"Would you be interested in being
Jackie Robinson?" asked Tucker, a rare
black in northern New England.
The region's three states are the
whitest in the country, according to
2000 census figures: Maine is 96.9 per-
cent white, just ahead of Vermont (96.8
percent) and New Hampshire (96 per-
cent).
Each state grew slightly m4'
diverse during the 1990s, but their
minority populations remain propor-
tionately the smallest in the country.
One theory on the lack of diversity is
that northern New England did not
have the industries of Detroit or Chica-
go to draw southern blacks during the
1930s and '40s, said Deirdre Mageean,
a demographer at the University of
Maine.
- Compiledfrom Daily wire repo*

'__

SE

IOR DAYS
'HERE'

I
i
i
ARE
i
i

TODAY AND TOMORROW: MONEY MATTERS! SEMINARS 1 &2 -
7 p.m. both nights, Alumni Center
You're about to earn your first salary, but what are you supposed to do with it? Get a jump start
on your financial life after graduation at these great workshops! You'll hear practical tips on
things like how to manage your credit card debt, pick the right benefits from your employer, deal
with taxes and save for the future. You'll also have the opportunity to talk with recent U-M grads
about what it's really like after graduation. As a bonus, everyone who attends also gets Life After
Graduation, a great guidebook on everything else financial, such as finding an apartment, buying
{ Y a car, living on a budget and more!
THURSDAY: SENIOR SEND-OFF - 5 p.m., Ingalls Mall, across from Rackham
Celebrate your graduation with your friends at the Alumni Association. There will be
music, free food and drinks, information about cities across the.
United States, and you could even win a new Passat from
Howard Cooper Volkswagen! Free prize
drawings every half hour, induding a multi-.
sport adventure weekend trip for two.
You'll also have the opportunity to meet other U-M
grads relocating to your new city. Look for a postcard
in the mail detailing all the events at the send-off. We'll see you there!

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
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EDITORS: David Enders, Lisa Kolvu, Caitlin Nish, Jeremy W. Peters
STAFF: Kristen Beaumont, Kay Bhagat, Ted Borden, Anna Clark, Courtney Crimmins, Whitney Elliott, Jen Fish. Samantha Ganey, Jewel
Gopwani. Ahmed Ilamid, Lisa Hoffman, Elizabeth Kassab, Jane Krull, Tovin Lapan, Hanna LoPatin, Susan Luth. Louie Meizlish, Jacquelyn
Nixon. Shannon Pettypiece, John Poley, James Restivo, Stephanie Schoihoiz, Nika Schute Karen Schwartz, tMana Sprow, Carrie
Thorson. Kelly Trahan, Kara Wenzel, Jaimie Winkler.
CALENDAR: Lindsey Alpert
GRAPHICS: Amanda Christianson, Scott Gordon.
EDITORIAL Michael Grass, Nicholasb Woomer, Editors
ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Peter Cunniffe, Manish Raiji, Josh Wickerhtam
STAFF: Ryan Blay, Sumon Dantiki, Jessica Guerin, Rachel Fisher, Justin Hamilton, Johanna Hanink, Aubrey Hearetty, Henry Hyatr, Shabire I
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CARTOONISTS: Dane Barnes, Aaron Brink, Chip Cullen. Thomas Kulgurgis.
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ARTS Ben Goldstein, Managing EditorI
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PHOTO Louis Brown, Jessica Johnson, Edit
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ARSOCIATF MANAGFR:rnr Traidman

4/28 WELCOME TO TNE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION -8 a.m., Kipke Drive
parking lot, adjacent to Crisler Arena
Don't miss your last chance on campus to gn up for your free one-year membership in the
Alumni Assoation! Come learn what the Alumni Association has to offer you as a recent gradu-
ote. Enjoy some music and celebration as you gather on the east side of Crisler Arena to prepare
for the commencement processional into Michigan Stadium.
4/28 MICHIGAN MEMORIES - Immediately following commencement,
first floor, Michigan Union

n

- UE~.W* 3.3 ~-
DAILY...

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