2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 9, 1995 IRELAND Continued from Page 1A beyond what I think is just a perma- nence and stability issue. ... I think that evidence will stand tall in the appellate court too." The case gained national attention last year because Cashen based his decision to give Smith custody on Ireland's status as a student and her decision to put Maranda in day care while attending classes. Ireland and her daughter reside in Northwood Family Housing. Maranda attends preschool in Ann Arbor three days a week and is in University-spon- sored day care for another 22 hours per week while Ireland attends class, She is taking 16 credit hours this term. Ireland said she received thousands of letters and hundreds of telephone calls of support from single mothers, working parents and students during the trial. "I think this will be a great victory for everyone," Ireland said. "Today was one of the happiest days of my life. It was just a huge weight lifted off my shoulders that I've been carry- ing around for a year." MURDER Continued from Page IA gators that the suspects may have been involved in a homicide arson case be- ing investigated by the Washtenaw County sheriff," Hall said. "Our inves- tigators interviewed the suspects and were able to establish that there was an alleged connection." Firefighters found the body of Daniel P. Rice, 47, while extinguishing a blaze at his home on Sept. 20. Police alleged the two suspects murdered Rice on Sept. 18. Lipke then allegedly returned to Rice's home two days later to set the fire. Lujan now faces a combined seven charges from the Baits arson, the Supe- rior Township homicide and arson, and the concealed weapon allegations, said her attorney, John M. Toomey. Lujan had been held in lieu of $500,000 bond after the concealed weapons warrant, but was denied bond at Tuesday's hearing. Toomey confirmed that Lujan was an acquaintance of the woman who lived in the Baits room, but would not comment on her connection with Lipke. Hall said the Baits fire is still under investigation. Lipke's preliminary hearing is set for Nov. 15 and Lujan's hearing is set for Dec. 7. The court will decide separately if there is enough evidence for them to stand trial. w IA o- r Debate stalls over cancer drug listing SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Quietly last spring, -a panel of California state- appointed scientists unanimously concluded that one of the world's most widely prescribed anti-cancer drugs, tamoxifen, can itself cause cancer. This finding would normally mean that tamoxifen, which has been pre- scribed worldwide to an estimated 3 million women with breast cancer, would be added to the governor's list of 404 other chemicals "known to the state to cause cancer." But the drug has not been listed. Instead, under pressure from the drug maker and the National Cancer Institute and after personal intervention by the governor himself, Gov. Pete Wilson's administration has delayed a decision indefinitely. The listing by the state of California could have major economic consequences for the drug manufacturer and possibly a psychological impact on women taking the drug as well. It also comes at a time when a National Cancer Institute study is under way to see if the drug is helpful not just in treating breast cancer but in preventing it. For that, investigators need to enroll healthy women, and some scientists believe that they would be scared away if the drug were flatly declared a carcinogen. Wilson personally intervened in the case just days before the July I deadline for adding chemicals to the list. HEY, You TIPOFF is coming i .- -- Pow4 RALPH LAUREN GIORGIO ARMANII CALVIN KLEIN e y e w e a r V T he Cellular Biotechnology Training Program will offer Cellular Biotechnology 504 in the Winter '96 term. Topics covered include biomolecular recognition, cellular differentiation control, signal transduc- tion and transcription regulation, microbial adaptation and response in environmental bio- technology, cellular biotechnology applications to disease treatment at the organ level, retroviral targets for therapeutic drug design, and modern bioanalytical methods. rerequisites: Introductory course in Biology and Biochemistry Tectures will be held Tuesdays and Thursdays ..L~rom 5:30-7:00 p.m. in 5623 Med. Sci. II Vjor more information, FU call Dr. Jerome Kukor at 763-5833. ATTENTION: ALL DECEMBER GRADUATES Graduation is a very hectic time and this notice is to inform you that this semester GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENT ORDERS will be taken. Time:-10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Dates: Monday through Friday November 6,7,8,9, and 10 Place: Michigan Union Bookstore fta iSTrUDENTDiSCOUmNTSI STUDY IN ISRAEL at the HEBREW UNIVERSITY OF JERUSALEM - *ONE YEAR AND SEMESTER PROGRAMS* *SUMMER COURSES* Informational Meetings Thursday, Nov. 9th 8pm @ Hillel Friday Nov. 10th Sl]am-3pm Student Union 4-5pm Int ' Center Groups protest auto lemon laundering' WASHINGTON - Daniel Garcia1 won his legal battle in 1992 to get Chrysler Corp. to buy back his Dodge Caravan, which dripped water into his lap every time it rained. But the Springfield, Va., resident was surprised to get a call the next year from Karen Melvin of Minneapolis. She had purchased his 1989 Dodge Caravan,1 and it was leaking water - a problem the dealer told her had been fixed be- fore she bought the used car.4 "Every time I turned a corner, water wouldpourinto my lap," Melvin saidof driving after ahard rain. Garcia told her{ he had the car in the shop 36 days as mechanics tried unsuccessfully to fix it. Seven consumer groups are accusing automakers and dealers of sometimes passing a vehicle like Garcia's to a1 used-car buyer without fully disclosing the vehicle's defect-known as "lemon i laundering." The groups said often the cars are moved across state lines to tryl to get around a state lemon law. Yesterday, they petitioned the Fed- eral Trade Commission asking for a U.N. encies force out ,khan women UNITED NATIONS - Under pres-1 sure from Islamic radicals, the United Nations is cutting women from its staff in Afghanistan. A human rights group accused it yesterday of discrimination. The Taliban militia objects to women working outside fields such as health and education, and there have been re- ports of threats against women and of- fices where they work, said Kevin Kennedy, a U.N. spokesman. Some U.N. agencies tried to let Af- ghan women work from their homes, "but in the long run that proved un- workable, and in the end their contracts were not renewed" when they expired, Kennedy said. Hedidn't know how many women lost their jobs. The head of the U.N. aid agency, Peter Hansen, warned Taliban leaders last month that threats against working women could jeopardize support for aid programs in Afghanistan. Those programs reach some 2 mil- lion people. U.N. agencies in Afghani- stan include the World Food Program, the World Health Organization and federal enforcement program-to stop it. "The key is full disclosure. Then in- formed consumers can make intelligent choices," said Jack Gillis, spokesman for the Consumer Federation ofAmerica. Report: Nation lags in education goals WASHINGTON - Five years after the nation's governors set ambitious goals to make American education world class, schools have made modest progress at best, a panel of governors and other state lawmakers said yester- day. The plan, now embroiled in politi- cal fights, can only succeed if parents and schools renew their efforts to toughen academic standards, the panel said. High school completion rates have not improved since 1990, according to a study the panel issued yesterday. Read- ing achievement has remained flat in grades 4 and 8 and has fallen among high school seniors. And a large gap still exists between white and minority students' rates of college enrollment and completion. UNICEF. "What the U.N. has done to the fe- male staff inAfghanistan is outrageous," said Surita Sandosham, executive di- rector ofthe human rights group Equal- ity Now. Passenger hijacks jet near Athens airport ATHENS, Greece - An Ethiopia. passenger armed with a knife hijacke an Olympic Airwaysjumbo jet arrivin from Bangkok, Thailand, shortly be fore it landed at Athens airport earl this morning. Police and control tower officials sai the man took a flight attendant hostag and asked for representatives of th United Nations and the media. Olympic flight 472 landed at 4:0 a.m. (8:04 p.m. Ann Arbor time) wit 114 passengers and crew aboard, sai the officials, who asked not to be named They did not have any further identifi cation of the hijacker. The plane was parked at one side o the airport, said an official in the con trol tower. He added that the plane'. captain said the man was apparentl armed with a knife. -From Daily wire service ~L -~r } ! '} yl? i / 4.; ;;>%" :: .' : is .: ;: ;rr . "."r v .O .yJ rf i'r4$" 4 h.}.. "" '.'. v :.... ".. :r .. :. ,.". ti. ".... ....... .. .._ ._ ti .... ! 'y ' .sry . yv . ...:# ... --- 4 :{ .,},' t"n _ .,.s.r.:.r:J+}};y}}°> }.'}t7I. f s ml :ifTY1rini I U_ 'i phone: 663.5800 y r o h ,e ac , F .... i! real music. ",s mon.thrs OQOOma y. - 1 g f r sat .:9:}t,- i 0~l o O.4O r; ;? ., -. f h .4ti.v r{... The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by 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 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu verytihin is blurry ordeqd. G %i iv EDITORIAL S Editor In Ch ::... . : ..t.: A& DEAD PRESIDENTS __. 'V "'iri'f!Ir.x- 4 >!?{iri) '":;?;; " :":"".i4'+-':n :i i r"; r,.ir'', .f r ,{r'lr r r: 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 Glassberg, Kate Glickman, Jennifer Harvey. Amy Klein. Stephanie Jo Klein, Jeff Lawson, Laurie Mayk, Will Mc~ahiil. HeatherMiller. Gail Mongkoipradit. Laura Nelson. Tim O'Connell, Lsa Poris. 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 Akin, 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 Serilla, Jordan Stancil, Ron Steiger, Jean Twenge, Matt Wimsatt, Adam Yale, M 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, Chaim Hyman. Andy Knudsen, John Leioi, Marc Lightdale, Chris Murphy. Monica Polakov, Jim Rose, Jed Rosenthal, Danielle Rumore, Brian Sklar, Mark Snyder, Dan Stillman. Doug Stevens. Dan Van Beek. ARTS Heather Phares, Alexandra Twin, Editors EDITORS: Dean Bakopoulos (Books), Melissa Rose Bernardo (Theater). Jennifer Buckley (Weekend, etc.). Brian A. Gnatt (Music), Kari Jones (Weekend, etc.), Emily Lambert (Fne Arts), Joshua Rich (Film) STAFF: Matthew Benz, Josh Biggs. Eugene Bowen, Kate Brady, Mark Carlson. Neal C. Carruth, Christopher Corbett. David Cook, Thomas Crowley. Ella de Leon, Stephanie Glickman, Lise Harwin. Josn Herrirgton, Kimberley Howitt, Kristin Long, Elizabeth Lucas. Jennifer Petlinski, Elan Stavros, Matthew Steinhauser, Prashant Tamaskar, Ted Watts, Kelly Xintaris, Michael Z iberman. PHOTO Jonathan Lurie, Editor ASSOCIATE EDITOR Mark Friedman, STAFF: Tonya Broad, B. Damian Cap, Nopporn Kichanantha, Stephanie Grace Lim, Elizabeth Lippmarn, Judith Perkins, Kristen ... -- ,r ::Y:;:{^ t., m K~kIe~dU I1i i fI~ 1I I iH--