NEWS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 6, 2004 - 3 ON CAMPUS LGBT Commission sponsoring 'Day of Silence' on Diag As part of National Coming Out Week, the LGBT Commission will hold a "Day of Silence" at noon today on the Diag. Students who wish to participate are encouraged to wear all black and stand in silence on the Diag in honor of those who stay silent because of homophobia and anti-gay violence. Middle Eastern cultures to be AMPlified on Diag The Lebanese Students Association is holding an "AMPlify Your Culture" event today on the Diag from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. The goal of the event is to educate people about Arab and Middle Eastern cultures in an interactive manner. Par- ticipants will learn facts about the Arab world, receive henna tattoos, learn to write names in Arabic and eat baklava. The Arab Student Association and the Jordanian Student Association are co-sponsoring the event. Nader's running mate to speak in Michigan Union Independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader's running mate, Peter Camejo, will campaign in the Pend- leton Room of the Michigan Union today at 3 p.m. Camejo is a long-time political activ- ist who marched for the civil rights movement with Martin Luther King Jr. in the 1960s. The event will be presented in both English and Spanish. CRIME NOTES Drugs swiped from hospital cabinet The Department of Public Safety is investigating a theft of a pack containing various drugs from a cabinet in Univer- sity Hospital, which occurred sometime before Monday night. New family dog bites, hospitalizes man who feeds it A man filed a police report with DPS Monday night from University Hospital after being bitten by a new family dog. DPS contacted the Washtenaw Coun- ty Sheriff's Department, and the man was told to contact the department after returning home from the hospital. Ashtray behind THIS CARROT'S DEFINITELY NOT ORGANIC House strikes down draft bill to end rumors WASHINGTON (AP) - House Republicans sought to quash a persistent Internet rumor that the government will reinstate a military draft after the elec- tion, engineering an overwhelming vote yesterday to kill legislation they hope will put the rumor to rest for good. Republicans accused Democrats of feeding the rumor mill to scare young voters and their parents into voting against President Bush. "This campaign is a baseless, malevo- lent concoction of the Democratic Party and everyone in this chamber knows it," said House Majority Leader Tom DeLay of Texas. The House voted 402 to 2 to defeat the draft bill offered last year by Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.). Even Rangel urged Democrats to vote against the bill, and charged Republicans were cynically trying to use the measure to escape election-season questions about the war in Iraq. (Republicans) know it. They're trying their best to tamp down this fire." The Bush administration has strongly denied any plan to reinstate the draft, but the denials have not killed the rumor. "There are some who have tried to bring this up as a scare tactic and that is highly unfortunate"White House spokes- man Scott McClellan said yesterday. "The president does not believe we need a draft and he's made that repeatedly clear." Speaking to Iowa voters Monday, Bush said, "We will not have a draft so long as I am president of the United States." Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry has suggested the draft could be reinstated if voters re-elect Bush. Kerry said his plan for Iraq, which calls for a summit and for allies to share a greater part of the burden, would not need a military draft. Campaigning in Iowa yesterday, Kerry told reporters, "I've never said they're Kissinger defends 1970s Latin Ameri DETROIT (AP) - Former Secretary of State Henry Kiss- inger yesterday defended his approach to Latin American dic- tatorships in the 1970s, saying he had purposely steered clear of "personal attacks" when it came to condemning human rights abuses. Kissinger's comments followed the release on Friday of transcripts that show he wanted to punish subordinates who criticized Argentina and Chile for human rights abuses. The transcripts were released by the National Security Archive, a foreign policy research center, which said it obtained them from the U.S. State Department after filing a Freedom of Information Act request. Kissinger said the United States at the time was balanc- ing two concerns in Latin America: keeping communist governments from taking root and discouraging human rights abuses. "The method we chose - which people can argue about - was that I made two public speeches emphasizing the Ameri- can concerns on human rights and stating that countries that systematically violated (them) would not be able to get the sort of support, economic and otherwise, that they wanted," Kissinger said at a news conference following a speech to the Detroit Economic Club. He said he also made the same points in private conversa- tions with Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. "At the same time, I did not want personal attacks on the leaders," he said. Kissinger said in the cases mentioned in the tran- scripts, lower-level officials had violated that policy, ca policy calling it a "bureaucratic, management issue" within the State Department. The military dictatorships in Argentina and Chile killed thousands of perceived political opponents in the 1970s and '80s. Kissinger yesterday also criticized the National Security Archives for taking his statements out of context. "Just to take a sentence out of a telephone conversation when you have 50 other conversations, it's just not the way to analyze it," he said. "I've been telling people to read a month's worth of conversations, so you know what else went on." There has been much debate about Kissinger's relation- ships with Latin American military dictators when he was secretary of state in the Nixon and Ford administrations. Such regimes often were supported by the United States as anti-communist allies. In the transcripts released last week, Kissinger called one official's remarks criticizing Pinochet "a bloody outrage." "I have not become a super liberal. This is not an institution that is going to humiliate the Chileans," Kissinger was quoted as saying in the June 1976 conversation with William Rogers, then assistant secretary of state for Latin America. In another case, Kissinger complained about a diplomatic protest issued by the State Department to the Argentine junta over escalating rights abuses. "In what way is it compatible with my policy?" Kissinger was quoted as asking his top Latin America aide. "I want to know who did this and consider having him transferred." Just two law- makers, Rep. John Murtha (D-Pa.) and Rep. Pete Stark (D-Calif.) struck off on their own and voted for the measure. "We are in a war, and not only a small segment of the population should fight in that war," Murtha said. The specter of a "I would not advise anybody that's running for election as a Democrat to vote for this." - Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) Draft bill's sponsor going to have a draft. I've said I don't know what they're going to do. I know what I'm going to do. I'm going to pursue a policy that guarantees we don't have a draft." Rock the Vote said it is rais- ing the draft issue because the presidential can- didates haven't addressed it. Internet rumor," said wartime military draft like that of the Vietnam era has lingered around the presidential campaign for the past few weeks, fueled by an e-mail driven rumor mill and a campaign by Rock the Vote, a nonpartisan group that seeks to boost voting among young people. The White House yesterday accused opponents of President Bush of trying to scare voters with false rumors. Much of the Internet gossip circling the Web has suggested that Republicans, including the president, have a plan to surreptitiously bring back the draft in a second Bush term. Democrats say worries about it are spurring voter registration on college campuses and among people in their 20s in urban areas. "Everywhere they go on the Inter- net, all they see is the draft, the draft, the draft," said Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.) "The Rock the Vote effort among kids in this country is afire and "This is not anI Rock the Vote spokesman Jay Strell. "Young people in America deserve an honest and open debate about the possi- bility of a draft. Neither side has offered up what they're going to do to meet the current and future military needs." Strell said his group's website has seen a huge spike in recent days in downloads of voter registration forms, now up to about 40,000 a day. The draft legislation scheduled for debate yesterday was introduced by Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y), a fierce critic of both the Iraq war and the Bush administration. "I would not advise anybody that's run- ning for election as a Democrat to vote for this," said Rangel, who contended Republicans abused parliamentary stan- dards to rush a vote to the floor without hearings or discussion. "It's a prostitution of the legislative process," he said. F P"E"EASS Res triions may apply. MD z ALL-NUDE AMATEUR CONTEST TONIGHT @1OPM $300 CASH PRIZEI CALL FOR DETAILS OCT. 8-9TH: PAJAMA PARTY WEEKEND OCT. 13TH: POLE PRINCESS 2004 ,~OCT 21-23RD: XXX FILM STAR TRISHA UPTOWN a7 - I Perry Building reported missing DPS reports indicate an ashtray was stolen from the parking lot behind the Perry Building at 330 Packard Street sometime before last Friday. THIS DAY In Daily History Daily interviews author John Irving Oct. 6, 1984 - The Daily published an interview with John Irving, author of "The World According to Garp," as a preview of Irving's visit to Rackham Auditorium. Irving discussed his involvement in politics - he was an outspoken support- er of Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale - and his upcoming sixth novel, "The Cider House Rules." Asked about people who say artists should stay out of politics, Irving said, "I don't think as an artist that my entry into politics is special. I'm involved in politics because I'm a citizen. Not all of DEJA ::V