2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 24, 1995 wr oril? / . Castro: Cuba could learn from U.S. From Daily Wire Services UNITED NATIONS - As Cuban leader Fidel Castro moved about the power centers of New York yesterday, he played down his treatment as pariah and noted that his country could learn a few things about business from the United States. Smiling broadly within his phalanx of U.S. Secret Service and Cuban secu- rity agents, Castro gave an interview to CBS anchorman Dan Rather and met ,with members ofthe U.S. business com- munity at the Council on Foreign Rela- ions, a private think tank. A handful of irate Cuban Americans protested outside each stop, shouting "Murderer, murderer," and "No Castro, no problem." After the CBS interview, Castro signed autographs for network employ- ees. Mike Wallace and Paula Zahn emerged from their offices to get a glimpse of the 68-year-old Cuban leader. As when he addressed the U.N. General Assembly on Sunday, Castro wore a dark business suit, not his cus- tomary fatigues. He told Rather he was interested in learning how to make Cuba's economy "more efficient" and give it "good leaders." Comparing the Cuban economy to a huge U.S. corporation, he said, "The only difference is that you know how to manage it well and we don't." Asked if he believed communism had failed, Castro replied, "I can tell you quite the opposite. ... Capitalist governments have been a failure." He cited poverty and illiteracy as ex- amples. French, British leaders disagree on troop support France and Britain jointly contribute the largest share of troops to the U.N. peacekeeping force in Bosnia. In their speeches at the United Na- tions 50th anniversary celebration yes- terday, French President Jacques Chirac and British Prime Minister John Major unexpectedly tripped over each other in claiming top billing. "From Cambodia to Bosnia, France has become the leading contributor of United Nations troops," Chirac said. But Major asserted a few minutes later, "The United Kingdom is the larg- Gingrich visits, promotes Boys Town BOYS TOWN, Neb. - Under bleak, gray skies and stiff, cold wind, House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) yesterday toured Boys Town, the institution for troubled youth he has held up as an "alternative to the modern welfare state." Gingrich sparked a minor uproar late last year when he said Hillary Rodham Clinton should "go to Bldckbuster and rent the Mickey Rooney movie about Boys Town" to understand his calls to overhaul the welfare system and his suggestion that orphanages would be better than having children remain with abusive and neglectful parents. "Orphanages are far better than having children driven into a lake, put in a dumpster or thrown out a window today," he Gingrich said yesterday. "Boys Town is far preferable to the kind of brutality all too many young people are subjected to by today's bureaucra system." The House-passed welfare measure that will be wrapped into the big spendir and-tax cut bill the House is to vote on Thursday would bar federal funds f children born to welfare recipients and to unwed teen mothers. The administrati and congressional Democrats say the plan is punitive. APU..T Cuban leader Fidel Castro talks with CBS News anchor Dan Rather during a tour of the television network's studios in New York City yesterday. - Hispanic Alliance for ~F Career Enhancement (HACE) presents the 10th Annual Career Development Conference Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, Illinois Friday, November 10 " Saturday, November 11 est contributor of troops to U.N. peace- keeping operations." Major said the number of British troops in Bosnia alone was 8,000. Chirac gave no figures. U.N. officials, noting that the number of troops involved in peacekeeping fluctuates constantly, said they could tell not tell immediately which country can rightly claim the credit. Greenpeace protests nuclear testing A Greenpeace activist with a gas- powered parachute was arrested yester- day after eluding police in helicopters and unfurling an anti-nuclear banner in the sky above the United Nations. Kai Britt, 33, of Bad Schwartau, Ger- many, opened the "Stop Nuclear Test- ing" banner about 700 feet up as Chirac spoke inside as part of the United Na- tions' 50th anniversary gathering. Police chased him for 20 minutes, finally forcing him down on Roosevelt Island in the East River across from the U.N. complex. He was charged with disorderly con- duct, reckless endangerment, obstruct- ing governmental administration and unlawfully flying overwater-all mis- demeanors, said Officer Kathy Kelly, a police spokeswoman. The demonstration, sponsored by Greenpeace, was to protest France's re- cent detonation of two nuclear devices in the South Pacific, ending a three-year moratorium on nuclear testing. AFL-CIO president opens convention with call for unity NEW YORK- With a call for unity to confront the Republican Congress, AFL-CIO President Thomas Donahue opened the annual convention that will choose between him and a challenger who claims enough support to take over. Donahue's address yesterday gener- ally steered clear of the issues that di- vide him and John Sweeney, who claims control of 55 percent of the votes to be cast by federation delegates represent- ing more than 13 million workers to- morrow. "It's true that we come here today divided on the issue of who will lead us over the next two years," Donahue told more than 1,000 delegates. "But on Thurs- day, let there be no question that when we leave this hall to carry on our work, we must do so with our divisions healed, our strength enhanced and our federation more united than ever before." In a morning press conference, Sweeney said he would work to heal any divisions caused by his candidacy, but insisted "we're very serious abo our program for change." President Clinton told the delegat he supported increasing the minimu wage and he called for a tax deductio for anyone paying for higher educatio Fan convicted of murdering singer HOUSTON - A jury convicted th former president of the Selena fan clu yesterday of murdering the belove Tejano singing star, rejecting Yoland Saldivar's claim that the gun went o accidentally. Saldivar could get as little as proba tion and as much as life in prison whe the jury returns today to decide on punishment. Selena, whose full name was Selen Quintanilla Perez, was 23 when sh was gunned down March 31 at a Corpu Christi motel. Regarded as the Latin Madonna, sh was a superstar in the world of Tejan music, a bouncy variety of Mexican American pop, and was working on he first English-language recording in hope of becoming a crossover sensation. Join Special Guest Speakers: Ray Suarez, host of National Public Radio (N PR's nationwide call in program, "Talk of the Nation". Maria Laria, host of the internationally- acclaimed show, "Sin Fronteras". CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS: " Two day Job Expo with 85 leading employers * Professional Development and College Student Workshops * Salute to Excellence Awards " Mega-Networking Recepiion/ Business Card Exchange " Women's Networking Luncheon " Student Scholarship Awards U U great sco res... Law School Business School Denta School Graduate Schoo Medical School great teachers... Kaplan helps you focus ur test prep study where you need it most. Our teachers wil ushow you the proven skills and test-taking techniques to help you get a higher score. get a higher score E I -800-,KAP-TEST1 * or E-mail: padinfoaumich.ed' .,;t T W O RLD mom) BBiM w 1 / ,,eech Sh or r eitratonor additionalf c For registration or additional information call 312/435-0498, ext. 11. French cafe owners demonstrate beneath Eiffel Tower PARIS - Several hundred cafe own- ers demonstrated beneath the Eiffel Tower yesterday to protest high.taxes they say are driving them out of business. But that's just part of the problem. Industry insiders say 4,000 bistros a year are going bust because more French are eating fast food, shunning ciga- rettes and booze and simply staying home, American couch potato-style. Desperate cafe owners trying to put a friendly face on sometimes gruff ser- vice have even taken the extraordinary step of sending waiters to smile school. Yet, cafes keep disappearing from the French landscape almost as quickly as the steaming cups ofespresso they serve. "When the last cafe closes, it's the soul of the village that dies," said Christian Couderc, owner of a suburban Paris cafe. Intellectuals and workers alike have long gathered around small bistro tables to socialize with neighbors or exchange news and ideas, making cafes the quint- essential symbol of French society and culture. Before World War I, cafes num- bered more than half a million. But by 1980, there were just 80,000; and today there are fewer than 50,000 left. In 1994, more than 1,500 cafes closed in Paris alone. The wave of terrorist bombings tha have killed seven people and wounde 160 since midsummer hasn't helped: Nearly 70 percent of cafes say busines is down since the bombings began. Endangered cats too expensive, may starve BEIJING - Saved from extinction in the wild, 76 rare Manchurian tigers reportedly could starve to death be- cause their breeding center can't afford to feed them. The tigers at the Hengdaohezi Feline Breeding and Raising Center in north- east Heilongjiang province eat three head of cattle a day. Their food and medicine cost about $1,200 daily. The center isn't supported by the central government, and is more than $1.2 million in debt, the Beijing Youth Daily reported yesterday. Banks have refused to give it any more loans, and the center said if it doesn't get money, the tigers will starve. Researchers found just seven Man- churian tigers in the wild from 1980 to 1985. The tiger center was set up in 1986 with two tigers, the newspaper said. It was not clear where the 76 cats at the center came from, but most, if not all, were bred in captivity. - From Daily wire services u The micnigan uily (IS N045-+967) is puUished MonaUyt hrougr riuay during thef l land witer trmIs uy 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 764-0552 circulation 764-0558; classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 7640554; Billing 764-0550. 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Elizabeth Lucas, Jennifer Petlinski, Elan Stauros, Matthew Steinhauser, Prashant Tamaskar, Ted Watts, Michael Zilberman. PHOTO Jonathan Lurie, Editor Eat real bagels... rollerblade in Central Park... tour Black Rock... see the lions... study Shakespeare... watch Shakespeare... do Shakespeare... join the crowds... feel the beat ... smell the roses.. . smel l the suanhw . - i r aanrds h i ne..- - nr sle . - ..hit the cluhm---