2A -The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 13, 1995 Rivers may give up pay if government shuts down tonight WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. Rep. Lynn Rivers said Friday that Congress is not doing its job in the face of a threatened government shutdown. "It is scandalous that we have not been able to come to some sort ofagree- nent here, and I think people at home are really disgusted," said a frustrated Rivers (D-Ann Arbor). Rivers said that ifcongressional lead- ers and President Clinton cannot get past their budget impasse, she would give back her government pay until Rivers furloughed federal workers get their paychecks again. The House on Friday approved a measure extending the government's authority to spend money through Dec. 1,as Congress and the administra- tion tussle over the October. The measure now returns to the Senate because of a minor differ- ence with a version adopted by that chamber Thursday night. The Senate is expected to approve the House spending bill and forward it to Clinton tonight,just hours before the midnight expiration of a previous stop- gap spending measure. The timing would leave the President little choice but to sign it or furlough 800,000 of 2 million federal workers tomorrow morning. Republicans are adamant about want- ing a balanced budget in seven years. Clinton has said the budget he is getting from Congress is too severe on Medi- care, the environment, education and other issues. "I'm not in a position to move either side in this debate," said Rivers, who is serving her first term in the House. "But I understand my obligations, and I don't feel comfortable taking money when Congress as a whole is not meeting its responsibilities." I ATIONAL REPORT Atlantis heads toward Russian station CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -Atlantis and its crew dashed after the Russian space station Mir yesterday, drawing closer and closer for a tricky - and risky - docking. When Atlantis catches up to Mir on Wednesday, it will be the first time a shuttle is used in station assembly, providing NASA with much-needed experience forbuilding an interna- tional space station. Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield's children, ages 9, 10 and 12, were excited for their dad, making his first space trip. They had their own big plans, though. They were going to Disney World. Hadfleld Atlantis and the five astronauts began their voyage at 7:30 a.m., punching through low clouds on their way to orbit. Until the last few minutes of the countdown, it seemed as though the clouds over the launch pad and bad weather at the shuttle emergency landing strips overseas would delay liftoff for the second day in a row. But NASA decided the clouds posed no obstruction, and the sky cleared just in time at two touchdown sites in Spain. budget for the fiscal year that began in Daily news staff wants ambitious writers: Call 76-DAILY V The Psychology Peer Advisors Present FOCUS GROUPS Fall 1995 PSYCHOLOGY AS A CAREER Careers in Psychology with a Ph.D., Psy.D., M.S.W., and M.D. Tuesday November 14 7:30-9:30 pm, Main Lounge*, West Quad -Refreshments will be served at all events. -Faculty members and graduate students will be available to answer your questions and discuss these issues. -RSVP to the Peer Advising Office Room 1346 East Engineering at 747-3711 1 MALL ARE WELCOME!! *MAIN LOUNGE: THOMPSON ST. ENTRANCE, 1ST FLOOR WEST QUAD WHAT CAN YOU DO WITH A DEGREE IN MATH? COME AND FIND OUT!. Ohl if i fl\V , CARE ER PAT HWAY I KNMATal Thursday, November 16, 5:10 p.m. Pond Room, Michigan Union All students interested in math are welcome! SPONSORED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS AND CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MEDICAL SCHOOL Student Biomedical Research Program invites you to attend the 41st ANNUAL STUDENT RESEARCH FORUM (medical and undergraduate students will be presenting their summer research experiences in poster format) Tuesday, November 14,1995 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Towsley Center (Second floor lobby) On the Medical Center Campus For more information: Office of Student Biomedical Research Programs at 763-1296 White House had Whitewater papers WASHINGTON - Early in the Whitewater affair, a White House lawyer obtained confidential documents from a key facet of the investigation, hastily re- turningthem aftertheJustice Department launched a probe to determine how presi- dential aides used the material. For five or six days in mid-Novem- ber 1993, then-Associate White House Counsel Neil Eggleston had a report that detailed a series of defaulted feder- ally backed loans by David Hale, a Little Rock judge who was emerging as a central figure in Whitewater. The report by the Small Business Administration triggered a criminal in- vestigation of Hale, who was indicted just two months before the White House obtainedthe information from the SBA, according to documents reviewed by The Associated Press. At the time, Hale was alleging pub- licly that he had been pressured in 1986 by Clinton, then the Arkansas gover- nor, to make an improper SBA-guaran- teed loan of $300,000 to the Clintons' Whitewater partners. The loan, which was never repaid, is at the heart of Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr's criminal investigation. Hale has since pleaded guilty to federal charges, and is Starr's most important cooperating witness. Doctors would bar care for some babies WASHINGTON - Hundreds-of doctors say they would recommend withholding expensive medical care from babies born to HIV-infected moth- ers even when they didn't know if the baby actually had the AIDS virus. Most babies born to HIV-infected mothers do not develop the virus. The findings, reported in yesterday's American Journal of Public Health, are "shocking," said Arthur Ammann of the Pediatric AIDS Foundation. New York researchers studied 951 neonatologists nationwide to determine how they would treat newborns who had such expensive-to-treat conditions as kidney or heart disease in addition to being born to HIV-infected mothers. t4 The Office of the Vice President for Research, Office of the President, and Senate Assembly Present Dr. Mary L. Good Under Secretary for Technology United States Department of Commerce The Nation's Innovation System: The Need for a New Vision Pa- glow 1* Monday, November 13, 1995 4:00 p.m. Chrysler Auditorium SA ROU ND T HE WORLD .6 Trade disputes linger "With only a week to go, the Osaka summit is ... in considerable trouble," between U.S., Asia C. Fred Bergsten, a Washington-based economist who heads an APEC advi- TOKYO - One year ago, President sory group,saidat a congressionalhear- Clinton and 17 other Asia-Pacific leaders ing in Washington last week. gathered in Bogor, Indonesia, and with much ceremony and rhetoric announced I= pushes weapons an agreement to open their economies to Iran , p e s g Uwe s each other by the year 2020. plan, defying Us, But as Clinton and other leaders of the Asia-Pacific Economic Coopera- WASHINGTON -- In defiance: of tion nationsapreparectongather in Osaka the escalating U.S. campaign to tighten this week, last year's euphoria has dis- the squeeze on Iran, the Islamic repub- sipated. Under the leadership of Japan, lie is expanding its $5 billion global thisyear'shostcountry,APEChasmade quest for arms to rebuild its arsenal, little headway in resolving any of the according to senior U.S. officials. contentious trade-liberalization issues The latest contact has gone as far that divide the countries. afield as South Africa, where Iranian For the United States, APEC is meant representatives in recent weeks have to allow America to expand in the most unsuccessfully explored the possibility economically dynamic regionoftheworld of buying long-range artillery. and serve its rapidlygrowingmiddle class. "Iran has now sent purchasing agents For Japan and other Asian countries, with wish lists to virtually every coun- APEC holds the potential to increase in- try that makes arms and isn't Western, vestment, trade and standards of living. to see if it can do deals," a U.S. arms But as the time comes for real action to specialist said. remove barriers to investment and trade, Iran's initiatives have led the Clinton Japan is talking of an "Asian way" of administration to warn a growing num- patience and consensus, ofa need to give ber of governments that trading in arms special treatment to rice farmers. The with pariah states such as Iran endan- United States, meanwhile, has not of- gers U.S. aid and political support, ac- fered to cut tariffs ahead of schedule. - From Daily wire services . .. . . OWMWWN W I1 F I ATTENTION ADVERTISERS Due to the Thanksgiving holiday, there will be early deadlines for the following publications: RECORDS schedued for:1~~i~.jjh~f : . * +r i " d e 0 O r CD VD c/" C7 O Publication Date Monday, Nov. 27 Tuesday, Nov. 28 Wednesday, Nov. 29 Deadline Monday, Nov. Tuesday, Nov. Tuesday, Nov. 20 21 21 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday tnrougn Fnay auring he Tall ano winter terms oy students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $165. 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 Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 7640552 circulation 7640558; Classified advertising 7640557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 7640550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu EDITORIAL STAFF Michael Rosenberg, Editor n Chief NEWS Nate Hurley, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jonathan Berndt, Lisa Dines. Andrew Taylor. Scot Woods. STAFF: Stu Berlow, Cathy Boguslaski, Kiran Chaudhri, Jodi Cohen, Sam T. Dudek, Jeff Eldridge, Lenny Feller. Ronnie GlassbEfg, Kate Glickman, Jennifer Harvey, Amy Klein, Stephanie Jo Klein, Jeff LawsoneLaurie'Mayk' Will McCahill. Heather Miller, Gail Mongkolpradit. Laura Nelson, Tim O'Connell. Lisa Ports, Zachary M. Raimi, Anupama Reddy. Megan Schimpf. Maureen Sirhal. Matthew Smart.Michelle Lee Thompson, Katie Wang, Josh White. CALENDAR: Josh White. EDITORIAL Julie Becker, James M. Nash, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Adrienne Janney, Joel F. Knutson. STAFF: Bobby Angel, Patience Atkin, Zach Gelber, Ephraim R. Gerstein, Keren Kay Hahn, Judith Kafka, Chris Kaye, Jeff Keating, Gail Kim. Jim Lasser. Ann Markey, Erin Marsh, Brent McIntosh. Scott Pence, David Schultz. Paul Serilia.-Jordan Stancil, Ron Steiger, Jean Twenge. Matt Wimsatt, Adam Yale. t Happy Thanksgiving from The Michigan Daily -Display advertising staff. E ' """""" s V " +I C: !'v's ID 4i4Y L4 $Eyv Att. i + " cre CP °...$ A4c(v1r& Tuce(~i'~u ,Q IM uF) ? f i c7. CL ro N N C Q' rv c- O Oi ct O N a Come SURF!O on the Michigan League Programming Board Interested Persons Drop by the Michigan League Programming Office (Rm 9) or Call 763-4652 *h1 ITTER YET 10011E SPORTS Antoine Pitts, Managing Editor EDITORS: Darren Everson, Brent McIntosh. Barry Sollenberger, Ryan White. STAFF: Donald Adamek. Paul Barger Nancy Berger Scott Burton.Dorothy Chambers. Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Susan Dann.Avi Ebenstein, Alan Goldenbach, James Goldstein. 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