2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 9, 2003 NATION/WORLD 4 Celebrate the Grand Opening of our newest Sprint Store in Ann Arbor by saving up to $180 with the purchase and activation of a PCS Phone. Now, a PCS Vision Picture Phone with built-in camera is $99.99 after $130 rebate. Plus, receive a $50 PCS Service Credit! Requires activation of a new line of service with a two-year PCS Advantage Agreement. This PCS Vision Picture Phone also offers: - Vivid full-color screen display - External color display - PCS Vision capability - Voice-activated dialing Only Sprint brings you the advanced multimedia services of PCS Vision - Clearly a whole new way to look at wireless. And get 1000 Anytime Minutes for just $45 a month. With this PCS Free & Clear Area-wide Plan, you can call to anywhere in the U.S. from anywhere in your extended calling area while on the Sprint Nationwide PCS Network. Two-year PCS Advantage Agreement required. Includes: - Unlimited PCS to PCS Calling " Unlimited Night & Weekend minutes - Nationwide Long Distance included - Unlimited PCS - PCS Calling just $5 a month Choose this phone & you'll get it for just $99.99! (Excluding taxes) PCS Picture Phone Sanyo 8100 Retail Price $229.99 Arnold now faces budget challenges LOS ANGELES (AP) - Seething over taxes and red ink, voters dumped the unpopular Gov. Gray Davis and replaced him with politi- cal novice Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Hollywood action star who now faces the colossal challenge he asked for: jump-starting California's flagging economy. Davis, the Democrat who presided over California's economy as it careened from boom to bust, was recalled Tuesday less than a year into his second term. According to partial returns, more than 55 percent of voters called for his ouster. Schwarzenegger, a moderate Repub- lican with tons of charisma but virtual- ly no political experience, was easily elected among candidates to replace Davis just two months after shocking even his closest aides when he declared his candidacy on "The Tonight Show With Jay Leno." The action hero may find that the hardest part is yet to come. He will need to quickly assemble an adminis- tration and work with a Democrat-con- trolled Legislature to close a projected $8 billion shortfall for next fiscal year. Schwarzenegger scheduled an after- noon press conference yesterday to dis- cuss the transition. Israelis increase troops for security JERUSALEM (AP) - Israel dis- patched troop reinforcements and weighed a call-up of reserves yester- day, citing new warnings about planned attacks by Palestinian militants. The military also extended a two- week lockdown on Palestinians' travel within the West Bank and Gaza in what it said was a bid to prevent fur- ther attacks. Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz ordered the troop reinforcements sent to the West Bank and Gaza Strip and canceled training courses for soldiers. Israeli military sources said orders for mobilizing reserve soldiers were being drawn up because of an increase of terror threats. The closure is to remain in effect at least until Oct. 22nd, and the government will then decide whether to call up reserves, media reports said. What do Howard Dean, Democratic Presidential hopeful, and embattled California Governor Gray Davis have in common? WWW .X-.-/ d- Visit www.xialumns.org/deandavis.htm to find out!I IFOOD FOR THOUGHT The Vietnam Protestors NEWS IN BRIEF PHILADELPHIA: Listening devices found in mayor's office Federal law enforcement officials yesterday confirmed that listening devices found in the offices of Mayor John Street were planted by the FBI - a discovery that touched off a political furor just weeks before Election Day. Three federal law enforcement officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, acknowledged that the FBI was responsible for the bug, but refused to comment on whether the Democratic mayor is a target of an investigation or to provide any details about the nature of the probe. Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell, a Democrat, and Sen. Arlen Specter, a Republi- can, were among several politicians who called on the FBI yesterday to tell the public what it knows about the eavesdropping equipment, found Tuesday. "I think given this extraordinary situation with four weeks to go in the campaign, it is incumbent upon the FBI to say why they planted the device," Rendell said. The bug was found during a routine sweep of Street's office by police. Street is locked in a bitter rematch against Republican businessman Sam Katz, and the campaign has been marked by charges of threats and race- baiting. Election Day is Nov. 4. WASHINGTON Supreme Court reviews work place rights The Supreme Court yesterday wrestled with the workplace rights of recovering drug addicts and alcoholics in a case with implications for thousands of employers and more than 5 million workers with substance abuse problems. The justices are considering whether an Arizona missile plant worker who lost his job after testing positive for drugs deserved to be rehired after getting sober. In one of the most closely watched business cases of the term that began this week, the case of Joel Hernandez requires the court to clarify protections for workers under the landmark Americans With Disabilities Act. The law specifically protects people who are clean after being treated for their addiction, but allows companies to discipline those who use substances on the job. At issue is Hughes Missile Systems' treatment of the 25-year employee, who was tested for drugs when he came to work one day in 1991 and reeked of alcohol. Hernandez quit when the test showed he had used cocaine. More than two years later, after completing drug and alcohol treatment, he was rebuffed when he tried to get rehired. The company had an unwritten policy against rehiring workers who broke rules. 4 I Bring This Ad In Before Oct. 31 For These Great Savings! Sprint Store - Ann Arbor 235 South State Street (734) 913-4800 Sprint Storer The PCs Center Oa WUISLSt E. WlIspritet **Taxes, surcharges or other fees which vary by market, not included. Rebate Savings: Requires in-store purchase and activation of a new PCS Phone by 10/31/03 on a PCS Service Plan. Rebate may be instant or mail-in depending on the rate plan selected. Savings may not exceed total purchase price of phone. Service Credit: Service credit will be awarded if the account is kept active for 30 consecutive days after first invoice date and has no unpaid past-due amounts outstanding at the end of this 30-day period. Service Plan: Offer ends 10/31/03. A two- year PCS Advantage Agreement is required. Subject to credit. See in- store materials for details on rate plan featured above. $150 Early Termination fee and non-refundable $36 phone activation fee apply. A deposit may be required. Offers subject to change without notice. May not be combinable with other offers. Other restrictions apply. Copyright 02003 Sprint Spectrum L.P. All rights reserved. Sprint, the diamond logo and PCS to PCS Calling are trademarks of Sprint Communications Company L.P. WASHINGTON NASA tests method to repair heat shield Repairing the space shuttle heat shield in orbit may be simpler than NASA once thought, requiring one of the most basic of home repair items - a foam paint brush. NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe said that engineers studying ways for spacewalking astronauts to fix a hole in the panels that protect the space shuttle from re-entry heat have found that an ordinary foam paintbrush could be used to spread a special compound while the craft is in orbit. Designing and testing such a repair kit is a key part of NASA's efforts to return the space shuttle to orbit in the wake of the Feb. 1 accident that destroyed Columbia and killed seven astronauts. The Columbia Accident Investigation Board determined that the shuttle was destroyed when superheated air entered a hole in the heat shield on the leading edge of the left wing and melted internal aluminum supports. WASHINGTON Foreign language use increasing Nearly one in five Americans speaks a language other than English at home, the Census Bureau says, after a surge of nearly 50 percent during the past decade. Most speak Spanish, followed by Chinese, with Russian rising fast. Some 47 million Americans five years and older used a language other than English in 2000, the bureau said. That translates into the nearly one in five, compared with roughly one in seven 10 years earlier. There also were more people consid- ered "linguistically isolated" because of limited English, a situation that some analysts say can prevent people from assimilating fully into American society and hinder activities like grocery shop- ping or communicating with police or fire officials. WASH INGTON Silicone-gel breast implants may return Eleven years after most use of sili- cone-gel breast implants was banned amid fears they were dangerous, the Food and Drug Administration is considering letting them back on the U.S. market. Revisiting the emotionally charged issue, the FDA next week will hear tes- timony essentially pitting woman against woman - some who say the implants broke apart to leave lasting scars, others who want implants they say feel more natural to reconstruct breasts savaged by cancer. Inamed Corp. of Santa Barbara, Calif., reopened the controversy by ask- ing the FDA for permission to sell its version of the implants in America. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 4 4 4 4 WWW.MICHIGANDAILY.COM The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $105. Winter term (January through April) is $110, yearlong (September through April) is $190. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscrip- tions 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. E-mail letters to the editor to letters@michigandaily.com. 0 I , Yung Krall, daughter of the National Liberation Front's (Viet Cong's) ambassador to Moscow, states that at one time North Vietnam was within four days of surrender. However, the protest movement forced a halt to our bombing and the war dragged on. Did the protestors save or cost lives? NEWS Shabina S. Khatri, Managing Editor 763.2459, newsemchlgandally.con EDITORS: C. 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