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Show Wednesday, 20. May 1998 2 - The Daily Utah Chronicle gimpus Planet Earth Hinckley Institute of Politics To Help with D.C. Internships Suharto Says He'll Step Down, Suspect Shoots But Not Yet; Protests Continue Two Officers, an State Indonesia feeling of responsibility Troopers Student protesters forced their country The Hinckley Institute of Politics is accepting applications for internFall in 1998 D.C. for and Spring 1999 at the followships Washington, offices entities in and nation's capital. other the firms, ing D.C. Interns receive stipends of approximately $600 per month from the institute. Rent in the Oakwood Apartments in Alexandria, Va., is subsidized by the institute and interns are charged $125 per month. Fall Semester internships are already filling up. Information-iavailable for the offices listed. Call the Hinckley Institute of Politics at s 581-850- - CONGRESSIONAL PUBLIC RELATIONS: Offices of Senator Robert Bennett, Senator Orrin Hatch, Congressman James Hansen, Congressman Merrill Cook and Congressman Chris Cannon. PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION: Mendez England & Associates ( a consulting firm) and the Heritage Foundation ( a conservative information center). INTERNATIONAL: usually request foreign language (Spanish, French or Portuguese): MCD International (Portuguese), Mitchell Group, Pal Tech (management consulting, Middle East - Eastern Europe equipdevelopment and Global Village Communications (hands-oment, research) LOBBYING GROUPS: The Committee for Education Funding, National Association of Child Advocates, Southern Utah Wilderness Association (SUWA) Marcus Faust OTHER: Senate Conference Committee (graphics, broadcast, administrative), U.S. Supreme Court - Office of the Curator, Treasury Department - Office of the Curator, The Caring Institute (humanitarian), White House Intern Program (application must be on file due 6 months ahead)GOPTV - Republican TV, and ABC News. n (AP) -- JAKARTA, way into the halls of Parliament and army tanks took up position around President Suharto's white-columne- d palace Tuesday, both sides bracing for new clashes after Indonesia's authoritarian leader said he will step down but not just yet. "Hang Suharto! Hang Suharto!" the more than 15,000:strong student contingent chanted from inside the echoing, marble-trimmebuilding, unfurling banners demanding reforms from the roof of parliament in a protest unlike any other in Indonesia's d history. Under pressure from economic crises, months of student protests and now riots in the capital of his country, Suharto told the nation Tuesday that he would end his but only at a reign time, and only after he oversees government reforms, a Cabinet shuffle, and new elections. "This decision comes from my 32-ye- ar - Experts Will Speak on What Talking Can Say About People in from in a said Suharto destruction," effort to save the sometimes somber, te speech televised nationally. He said his insistence on makreforms before he ing should down not be intersteps "resistance as on preted my part to But Indonesia's down." step increasingly aggressive opposition took it as just that. Students pushed their way into the halls and onto the roof of Parliament, occupying the building ahead of what's touted to be the largest yet in months of growa ing protests will that the rally opposition hopes draw up to 1 million students and workers to a park just outside the presidential palace. Army tanks and trucks rolled out by the dozens just before midnight Tuesday, unloading barbed wire for barricades to block off the long-refuse- d park and taking up positions on streets around the site apparently intent on keeping students from see "Indonesia" on page 5 Two mass communication scholars, professors Wayne Beach of San Diego State University and Robert Hopper of the University of Texas, will visit the University of Utah to participate in a special seminar on conversational analysis as a research tool, sponsored by die communication department. Thursday, May 21, Hopper and Beach will demonstrate how conversational analysis can serve as a powerful method for understanding people's ori- entations and contingencies in everyday communication practices Their presentation, "Interaction, Sexism and Gender," begins at noon in room 1100 of the Languages and Communication Building. Friday, May 22, from 9 a.m. to noon in the communication department's reading room, the two experts will hold a working data analysis session on "GOmmuniCation" in medical interviews. Recordings and transcripts of a medical interview at Kaiser Permanente serve as the subject for analysis. Hopper is the author of several articles on mass communication including A Fhspective, Flirtations: Conversation Analyses from Fiction and Life, and Ambiguities in Male Harassment and Female Resistance. Beach is the author of Devious Ibices: Storytelling as Choral Enactment. Micro-Analytic- al THE SSSs. DAILY UTAH CHRONICLE tart Sooner That's right. With the IT converting to a isenester system, fall classes begin Utagust 27, not late fepteriber (as they did ttn the Be sure XTtah of diversity Are You Graduating? Time is running out to take advantage of Academic Pricing on a new computer. Graduation Special Aurora K6 200 Rosetta, Cheryl Sanders, Michael Stanger, Sterling Clifford, Alexis Wood Rick Mortensen AMD K6 200 wMMX technology 32 MB EDO RAM 24x CD ROM 3.2 GB Hard Drive EIDE Photographers Lara Haehle Brittncc Hocllcin, Danny La, Beth McClcndon, Jimmy Nielsen, Eric Rolph SVGA 1 MB Accelerator Card 16 Bit Sound Card 33.6 Modem Cartoonists an Carlos Benson, Qiiinn Rollins and Dave Carlston 14" Optiquest Monitor NEC 150C Printer Speakers. Mic, Keyboard & Mouse Editor in Chief News Editor Feature Editor Robert AJones Performing Arts Editor Pop Culture Editor Editorial Editor JSports Editor Photo Editor Art Director Asst. News Editor Asst. Sports Editor Asst. Photo Editor Copy Editor Editor Amy Shafer Annika Haehle Kade S. Rolfson James Edward Green Stephen Coles Kyle Stephen Spencer Brandon Winn Johanna Workman Sabra Beddcs Clayton Fullmer ifiWi Shawn Parker Bailey, Joseph Clay, Sterling Clifford, Heather Dixon, Jennifer Elkington, Natalie Cower, Laura Hancock, Jcnn Henry. Ryan Hinman. Michael Hoffman, Aubrey Hopkins, Jordan Howe, David Jackson, Julie Jensen, Scott Lewis, Erik Martinez, Jacob Parkinson, Rick Windows 95 Typesetters and Production "Holly Braithwaitc, Ryan Bullock, Aaron Olson, Patty Parkinson Advertising Representatives Micah Halverson, Jamie Jones, Christy All Robert McOmbcr Kay Anderson Accounts Asst. Lynae Thompson Annie Schmutz Collection fop only tmttai tw m--k mtm wf Utrmttty tmlmn dtMt, ttw MmHrtml. Imahtm en m) rp wii tmm.ti) a Hmiw) h lart MM w44 tmf a imam mm am mtmtn nearby fire-rescu- e station which also serves as a station for 399 JO Uakttan lakmmilm Pnm Mfwt Itptm mt 0ew 0wlmit pmm "He somehow obtained a weapon and shot and killed two officers," said police spokesman Steve Cole. The suspect then carjacked a white Ford Ranger and shot a Florida Highway Patrol trooper who tried to stop him as he fled north along the highway, police said. The man told the radio station that police were shooting at him at every overpass, shot out a tire on the stolen vehicle and wounded him before he made it to the gas station. About an hour before the officers were shot, the suspect was taken in handcuffs from his home. He and his wife had told detectives their son was dragging a rifle along behind him when they yelled at him, the gun went off and he was shot in the head. "They yelled, 'Hey, don't do that!' and the rifle accidentally went off," Cole said. The couple rushed the boy to a fc Ntmmt m See us on the internet at: httpwww.ubs. utah.edu Hurras, Chad Margctts, Brady Pulsipher Business Manager Accountant to plan Accordingly. For riore information on seriester conversion see your advisor. The Daily Utah Chronicle is an independent student newspaper published daily Monday through Friday during autumn, winter and spring quarters (excluding test weeks and holidays) and weekly' during the summer quarter Chronicle editors and staff are solely responsible for the newspaper's content. Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the editorial board and not necessarily the opinion of the student body, the administration or the university's governing bodies. Subscriptions must be prepaid. Forward all subscription correspondence, including the change of address to tlie Business Manager, UNIVERSITY OF UTAH, THE DAILY UTAH CHRONICLE, 200 S CENTRAL For questions, comCAMPUS DR SUITE 240, SALT LAKE CITY UT 84112-9106- . ments or complaints call 801.581.7041. On-lin- e quarter system). - A man TAMPA, Ha. (AP) driven to being police headquarters for questioning in the death of his son shot and killed two officers on Tuesday and then fatally shot a state trooper, authorities said. The man then barricaded himself inside a gas station about 45 miles north of Tampa and was believed to be holding a female hostage. A SWAT team was at the scene, said police Chief Bennie Holder. In an interview with radio station WFLA, the man said he shot the two officers, then fled. "Cops were shooting at me," he told the radio station, adding that he was wounded in the buttocks and pulled over to the station. He said his son's death was accidental, he did not want to go to prison or be electrocuted, and that he wanted to talk to his wife. Police said she was on her way to the gas station. He said he was not threatening the hostage. "She knows she's going to live," the man said. The man identified himself as Hank Carr. Earlier police reports said his name was Joseph Lee Bennett, 33. Two Tampa homicide detectives were shot to death about 2 p.m. as they drove the handcuffed suspect to police headquarters for questioning. neighborhood police. When investigators tried to question the man, he fled on foot and managed to elude police until they found him hiding in nearby bushes 15 minutes later, Cole said. Detectives .were trying to determine if there were any other witnesses to the boy's shooting. "We're not sure exactly what happened," Cole said. Police confiscated three rifles from the home, including a Chinese version of the AK-1assault rifle. 7 M 'F 8:00 am S:30 pm, Tuesday Until 7:00 pm, Saturday 10:00 am 3:00 pm |