2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 16, 2001 NATION/WORLD CONFERENCE Continued from Page 1A MSA President Matt Nolan. -,Regardless of whether Jackson comes to town. Ciurtin said, the conference will he a huge step fior the civil rigzhts move- ment. " I think that this conference will be extremely significant because it will put the local struggles into a nationally coor- dinated firamework," she said. "This is the first conference of its kind" .Not everyone on campus is happy that a conference will be held here. "1 just think it's a cowardly move to hold it during the summer when I can't protest it," said LSA freshman Adam D)ancy, who has protested BAMN events in the past. "I'm actually disappointed." Dancy said he does not think the con- ference will make a difference on a national level. If they decide on anything it's not going to make a difference" he said. "It's going to be a worthless couple of days:" A mass organizational meeting will take place on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the MSA Chambers on the third-floor of the Michigan Union. NAKED MILE Continued from Page IA Washtenaw Avenue, down South University Avenue, through the West Hall arch, across the Diag, between Angell Hall and the Museum of Art, and across State Street to the Cube in Regents' Plaza. But Michigan Student Assembly Rep. Elizabeth Anderson, who is in charge of student security volun- teers for the run, said the plan will be for students to run straight down South University Av'enue to State Street. Running down South University, which is city property, might give jurisdiction for almost all of the event to the Ann Arbor Police Department, which arrested three students- out of 400 students who I . i. i i , Don't an~k.0 !1:1' z :: If ~*ut:: PRBLMPf :ACYK.L ran - last year. There is still a possibility that DPS' will have jurisdiction over the state-owned area between East Uni- versity Avenue and State Street that's part of campus property. "I guess it would depend on whether it would go down the street or on the grass,' Brown said. Despite the vocal position of the University, the threat of arrests and the possibility of ending up naked on the Internet, students say they will continue to run the mile. LSA sophomore Anthony Visioni, who ran the Mile as a freshman, said he will run again tomorrow. "The best thing is all your friends coming out and watching you run naked and just having a good time - just being an idiot and disap- pointing Mom, basically," he said. Visioni said he didn't see anyone get arrested at last year's Mile and being arrested isn't a concern to him. "I think that most people think that (police) say they are going to arrest people every year and they never see any one getting arrested," he said. "People are going to run if they want to run."~ But several student organizations, including the Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Association, have formally stated they do not approve of the event. "We decided this was not a safe event and we wanted to let our nmembers know that we're really tak- ing a stance. We don't think this is a good idea," said LSA senior Danielle Whitney, vice president of public relations for Panhel. NEWS IN BIEF m.# ,EDIE FRMA ROUND, THE WORL JERUSALEM Israel bombs Syrian post in Lebanon Israeli warplanes destroyed a Syrian radar position deep inside Lebanon early today, killing at least three Syrian troops in Israel's first attack on a Syrian army position in Lebanon since 1996. Israel said the raid was in retaliation for attacks by the Islamic militant l1z " 1- lah movement on Israeli positions. On Saturday, a Hezbollah rocket kille n Israeli soldier patrolling in a tank near the northern border. The airstrikes were seen here as a serious escalation in Israel's response to llezbollah, because they raised the possibility of confrontation with Syria. which maintains 35,000 troops in Lebanon. There was no immediate response from the Syrian government. But Lebanon immediately condemned the attack. Prime Minister Rafik I lariri called it a "serious aggression against both Lebanon and Syria." The attack came hours before Jordanian Foreign Minister Abdul-Ilah Khatib was due to arrive in Israel to formally present to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon an Egyptian-Jordanian plan for ending more than six months of' Israeli-Palestinian violence and restarting peace talks. Lebanese sources said that three waves of Israeli warplanes hit the Syrian radarOi- tion built on a hill near the main Damascus-Beirut hiohway. 22 miles east of Beirut, CINCINNATI Mayor rolls back curfew after calmn night The mayor yesterday rolled back the city':s dusk-to-dawn curfew in response to a calm night following the funeral of a young black man whose shooting triggeredl a ,week of unrest. Mayor Charles Luken said the curfewv will start at 1 1 p.m. instead of 8 p.m. to allow families more time to celebrate Laster together. ,0 "1 lope fully today can be a day of prayer. A day of peace. A day of coming together;" Luken said. The April17 death of 19 year old Timothy Thomas led to three days of rioting in predominantly black neighborhoods that stopped when the mayor instituted the curfew on Thursday., Overnight Saturday. police arrested 187 people for curfe~w violations. "It was almost a boring night for us,' police Chief Thomas Streicher said lie said there were calls about shots being fired, and sporadic instances of~rocks and bottles being thrown at police cruisers. GROUNDEZ I D lI.The center or origin of rapid, intense activity or change... 2. A college Ministry program involving discussion, connection with other PRINTING* LOWEST PRICES! r HIGHEST QUALITY! S*FASESTSER ViCE! * 1002 PONTIAC TR. U 1432 Washtenaw Ave. French Room (look for sign outside) ;745 Wednesday evening students and drinking coffee. the seven life-giving virtues:' fun hn " Unlimited Nights, Unlimited Weekends. Talk for hours without burning minutes. * Plus, Nationwide Long Distance. At no extra cost, 2417. , , : 4% R t . 4 P i Home Plan 1$29 99 $399 $49997 1 I 1 EM t ii Offer available to new and existing customers. 250 Anytime Minutes j Unlimited Nights Unlimited Weekends " Nationwide Long Distance 400 Anytime Minutes " Unlimited Nights s Unlimited Weekends " Nationwide Long Distance 600 Anytime Minutes " Unlimited Nights Unlimited Weekends Nationwide Long Distance arson, vandalism and curfew violations. WASHINGTON~ 'Time is up for tax' procrastinators The dlay of reckoning has arrived for the estimated 26 million taxpayers who have not finished their income tax forms. The filing deadline for taxpayers in most parts of the country is midnight today. In parts of" the Northeast, people have until midnight Tuesday because of the Patriot's Day holiday in Massachu- setts, home to an Internal Revenue Ser- vice center. Getting that extra day are taxpayers in Massachusetts, Maine, New Ilarnp- shire. Vermont, Connecticut and Rhode Island, and in New York state north of Westchester and Rockland counties. In their rush to file, tax procrastina- tors should double-check their math and take care to, use the correct tax amount fromn the tax table, the IRS advises. One way to save possible headaches later on is to correctly list Social Security numbers, including those for dependents. NEWYORK Skipper of sub may avoid court-martia The three admirals on the Navy's court of inquiry into the USS Greeneville's sinking ofU a Japanese fishing vessel have unanimously rec- omm-ended that the submarine's skip- per not be tried by a court-martial, The New York Times reported yesterday. Instead, the skipper, Cmdr. Scott Waddle, is likely to face a lesser form of punishment such as a punitive letter People have been arrested for lopting, or reprimand, the Times said, citing unnamed senior Pentagon officials. A reprimand would effectively end Waddle's career and could reduce his retirement benefits. But it would not result in a jail sentence, as a court~mar- tial could. The Navy's chief spokesman. Rear Adm. Stephen Pietropaoli, said yester- day that he could not confirmoe report "I don't know it to be true," Pietropaoli said. "Am I surprised? No." VATICAN CITY Frail Pope delivers Easter sermonx Fr ail, and at moments even wobbly. John Paul II expressed hope yestedy that the message of Easter can in -e humanity to defeat evil and bring peace to the Middle East. the Balkans, Africa and other places plagued by violence. "Men and women of the third .mil- lennium, the Easter gift of light' that scatters the darkness of fear and sad- ness is meant for everyone,' John Paul said near the end of a two-hour cere- mlony in St. Peter's Square, where-*e to 100,000 people braved unusually chilly weather for a Roman spring.r "Rediscover with joy and wonder that the world is no longer a slave to the inevitable. The world of ours can change: peace is possible even where for too long there has been fighting ,and death," the pontiff said, naming' the Iloly Land. Jerusalem. the Balkans, Africa. Asia and Latin America. -('onipiiedf i-oniDaily wire se*. Ericsson A1228di F REE ERICSSON, Suddenly, "I'll call you tonght" makes good economic sense. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) IS published Monday through Friday durng 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 fail 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. PHONE NUMBERS (AUl area code 734): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336: Opinion 764-05 Circulation 764-0558: Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554: Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily letters~runichedu. World Wide Web: www.rmchigandailyvco-r. NEWS Nick Bunkley, Managing Editor EDITORS: David Enders, Lisa Koivu, Caitlin Nish, Jeremy W. Peters STAFF: Kristen Beaumont, Kay Bhiagat, Ted Borden. Anna Clark. Courtney Crimmins, Whitney Elliott. Jen Fish. Samantha Ganey, Jewl Gopwani. Ahmed Hamid, Lisa Hoffman. Elizabreth Kassab, Jane Krull, Tovin Lapan, Hanna LoPatin. Susan Lth. Louie Meilsh Jacquelyn Nixon. Shannon Pettypiece, John Polley. James Restivo, Stephanie Schonholz, Nika Schulte, lKaren Schwartz. Maria Sprow,. Carrie Thorson. Kelly Trahan, Kara Wenzel, Jaimie Winkler. CALENDAR: Lindsey Alpert GRAPHICS: Amanda Christianson, Scott Gordon. EDITORIAL Michael Grass, Nicholas Woomer, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Peter.Cunniff, Manish Raiji, Josh Wickerham STAFF: Ryan Blay, Sumon Dantiki, Jessica Guerin, Rachsel Fisher. Justin Hamilton. Johanna Hanink. Aubrey Henretty. Henry Hyatt, Shabina Khsatri, Fadi Kiblawi, An Paul, Rahul Saksena. Matthew Schwartz. Jim Secrete, Lauren Strayer. Wa) Syed, Ben Whetsel., CARTOONISTS: Dane Barnes, Aaron Bink, Chip Cullen, Thomas iloigurgis. COLUMNISTS: Emily Achenbaum, Gina Hamadey. David Horn, Chris Kula. Dastin Seibert. Mike Spahn, Amer Zahr. SPORTS Jon Schwartz, Managing Editor SENIOR EDITORS- Raphael Goodstein, Michael Kern, Joe Smith, Dan Williams NIGHT EDITORS.;Krsten F~dh. Arun Gopal. Steve Jackson. Jeff Phillips, Ryan C. Moloney, Benjamin Singer. STAFF: Rahit Bhave, Michiael Bloom, Chris Burkie. Kareem Copeland. David Den Herder, Chris Duprey. Brian Druchniak. Mark Francescutt, Rhonda Gilmer. Richard Haddad, David Horn, Shawn Kemp, Albert Kim. Seth lerpner, Courtney Lewis. J. Brady McCullough. Adam McQueen, Nathan Linsley. Peter Land. James Mercier. Stephanie Often. Swapnil Patel. David Roth, Naweed Sikora. Jed Singer, Jim Webrer. ARTS Ben Goldstein, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jennifer Fogel, Robyn Melamned WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Jenni Glenn, Elizabeth Pensfer SUB-EDITORS. Lisa Raft rBooksi. Lyle lienretty (Pioni. Joi Schiff I Fine/Periforming Arts), Luke Smith i Music), Jeff Dickerson (TV/New Medial. STAFF: Charity Atchison. Gautam Bakrsi, Matthew Barret, Marie Bernard, Ryan Blay, Leslie Boxer, Rob Bom, Autumn Brown. Christopher Cousin, Laura Deneau, Kiran Diwela, abe Faari. Melissa Gollob, Matt Grandstaff, Joshua Gross, Christian Hoard, Erik Johnson, Meredith Keller, Chris Kila, Jenny Jeltes, Willheimina Mauritz. Sh~eila McClear. W. Jacarl Melton, Rosemary Metz, Shannon O'Sullivan, Ben Oxenburg,- Darren Ringel, Jamie Schey, Dustin Seibert, Christian Smith, Jacquelene Smith, Andy Taylor-Fabe, Roruth Thumati. John LUhl. PHOTO Louis Brown, Jessica Johnson, Edit ASSOCIATE EDITORS: David Katz, Marjouie Marshall ARTS EDITOR: Abby Rosenbaum STAFF: Rachel Feerman, Tom Feldkamp. Sam Holenshead, Jeff Hurvitz. Joyce Lee, Tom Lin, Danny Moloshok, Brett Mountain, Brendan ODonnell, Brad Quinn, Brandon Sedloff, Khsang Tran, Elite White. Alyssa Wood. ONLINE Kiran Divvela, Paul Wong, Managing Editorst STAFF: Rachel Berger.bLsa Cencula. Dana M. Goldberg, Sommy Ko. Mark McKinstry Vince Sust. CONSULTANTS: Toyin Akinmusuru. Mike Biik, Satadru Pramanik BUINSSSTFFMak . DISPLAY SALES Sarah Estella, Manager 1Cellular Services is now a part of Cingular Wireless. 1-866-CINGULAR wwwmcingular com cingular sm WIRELESS What do you have to say?" Available At Cinoiztar VVrmesStorns buisHesvsaWes Ollice. (248, 737-662G ANN ARBOR ;7341 66980179' BIRMINGHAM ;24152583106' CLARKSTON (248. 620.6870' DEARBORN (313) 277.411 EASTPOINTE 1810) 777.0007' FLUNT ;R)0) 733606' LATi-RUu VILULAGE (248) 557-8855' NOVI ;2418) 4491779' PLYMOUTH (734) 451.0720' SHELBY twe, (810) 566.8950' SOUTHGATE 1734) 285.8066' TROY (248O; 5886780' WESTLANO (7 34) 427 5760 Alsa aeablea. (f ese SF4RS sores: ANN ARBOR ;734) 994038 DEARBORN (13134411520' BRIGHTON eriderson Gl~ras, 810) 229.5506 M8 Sinal' (810) 220.85300 BROWNSTOWN Celular Advamtage, Inc., ;734) 362-7200 BURTON Mikos Pager, (8101 743.4847 CANTON Hen~derson, Glass, (734) 4596440 .(7c, 34; 455-51X3 a$tEStTEw Diamond Commu*'icaions, Inc, (810 9480035 CAINTON TWP. Mega~el, 810 28&333 Page One. 8117904)0000 Rapid Paqgg ( 81014160000 Sp~d elular & Pag, 810 792.8400 US ireless, 810) 263-57 DEARBORN Pox Pager, (303; 58W110 Mtro Cell, 3131624-8336 Page-Corn.(313; 58240040 Sounrd Advice, (313, 582.5599 DEARBORN Hr's. Sound Advice, (313) 274-9400 DETROIT FENTON Paper One.kIc, (810171(.3333 FLUNT Jos's P easter, 1810) 743-3151 Merro Ceil, i1) 7677900 FORT GRATIOT Cellular ~ord DBA Beeper & Ceiluiar Outlet. (8101385-1400 Metro Cell. ;8101 385-6913 GARDEN CITY Pageec, (734) 421.8000,' GROSSE POINT! Metro Celi, 313; 417-2520 Poalla Comnrriicatrons. (131417-900 HAZEL PARK Rapid Page & Cellular. Inc.. 248) 542-3333 H0OLY A-1 W reess, (248) 634-4100 GALAY CITY Custom Countrols, . Inc ilfiB) 724-58M LAKE ORION A & P Corrmve'iationa, 248) 814-1122 Discoun Video and Electronics. (248) 693.4543 LAPEER Joe's Pagemnaiter, (810; 245.1500 LATHRUP VILLAGE Diamond Commnnuications, Inc., (248) 3954444' Metro Cell, 2481 569-5638 A & P Com~munication;. 12481 332-0116 A & P Com~munications. 248( 373.8583 In- Tcudi Wireless, (24817145-1500 Select Communications. (248) 745-.8800 PORT HURON Henderson Glass, (810 987-6500 T.C Main Street. (8101985-7220 REDFORD Pone-Tec, Inc., (313) 387-9600 RICHMOND Allt=:ine Corrmunication; ,(8101 7 276884 ROCHESTER Sound Advartage, 248) 656.1611 Telecom USA, (248) 601-1818 ROSEVILLE Advanced Communications. 810 498-9700 Advanced Communications, (810) 774-5200 Pa~ecell Commirrcations, (810;-447-8292 Telecom USA. (80) 777-0300 ROYAL OAK American Telecommunications, (248 288-0980 SHELBY TAYLOR Advanced Conmmunications, (734) 374-1000 Cell Tech Wireless. 313) 389-3500 Elte-Cell. Inc,.(734) 374-1020 Page One, (313) 295.4000 Pager One, Inc.. 734) 374.2337 TROY Celluiar Advantage, (248) 435.9800* General Cellular. (248) 524-3232 Platinum Communications, Inc. (248) 8790000 fumre Page. (248) 740-3910 WARREN Aitmie Cellular. LIC. (80) 751.0900 Cell Touch Inc., (810 751-3777* Imperiai Plus Corrmunticatirr, (810) 759.4600 Meg.,Cel. (8101756-0000 Wireless Word Commi. Inc, (810) 558-9999 WASHINGTON TWP. Gold Line Communications, (810) 677-4655 WATERFORDO Cellular Advantage, (24816184000* Paqecell Communications, (2481 738-6500 I