Today Saturday Sunday High: 58 Low: 37 Precip: 0% High: 53 Low: 34 Precip: 50% High: 50 Low: 27 Precip: 40% IN BRIEF Ustav celebrates Indian culture, aids tsunami relief The Students of the Indian Sub continent will be hosting Utsav on Saturday night in the EMU Ballroom. Last year, about 500 people, includ ing 100 from the Portland area, at tended the event, which celebrates Indian culture with a dinner, skits and musical performances. SIS will be accepting donations for tsunami relief at the event. The event costs $5 for students and $7 for community members. The din ner starts at 5:30 p.m., and the show begins at 8 p.m. — Jared Pa ben Semi-formal ball to honor black leaders, entertainers The Black Student Union plans to recreate Harlem, the city where so many black leaders, musicians and performers got their start, on a small scale tonight, BSU member Patricia Haggerty said. The semi-formal event is dubbed “Harlem Nights, A Night Out on the Town. Celebrating the Journey to the Big Apple.” The ball will feature back drops of cultural references important to the history of Harlem. Haggerty said she believes this is an important event, not limited to music and dancing. “Even though this is a ball, it has a lot of meaning behind it,” Haggerty said. “It’s supposed to make us think of the heritage we come from. ” According to Gothamcenter.org, a NYC history Web site, black musicians called Harlem “The Big Apple,” refer ring to making it big in music. There was a club called “The Big Apple” in 1930s Harlem where many early jazz musicians performed. The dress code at tonight’s event, which starts at 10 p.m. and lasts un til 2 a.m. at the Red Lion Hotel, is also reminiscent of Harlem night* clubs of the 1930s and 1940s, BSU Co-Director LaTina Lewis said. “Back in the Harlem Renaissance they dressed up to hear jazz and po etry,” Lewis said. “The guys wore zoot suits, and the ladies wore dresses.” She added that BSU want ed everything about the evening to have a Harlem nightclub feel. This year’s ball will be limited to students 18 years old and older and is free to all University students, but donations will be accepted. The semi-formal dress code will be strictly enforced, Lewis said. — Sheldon Tfaver Bush discusses benefits involved in free, fair trade WASHINGTON, D.C. — Contend ing that Americans benefit from free trade, President Bush said Thursday he would keep pursuing liberaliza tion agreements around the world, even as critics say his policies have resulted in record trade deficits and millions of lost jobs. Bush’s pledge came in his annual economic report to Congress, a 438 page document that argued that his economic policies, ranging from making his first-term tax cuts perma nent to overhauling Social Security, will lead to greater prosperity. “I believe that Americans benefit from open markets and free and fair trade, and I am working to open up markets around the world and make sure that the playing field is level for our workers, farmers, manufacturers and other job creators,” Bush said in his message to Congress. — The Associated Press Delays on visa applications decline BY JUSTIN POPE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The State and Homeland Security departments have reduced from months to weeks the time it takes foreign students and scholars trying to travel to the United States to clear a key visa review, according to a new government report. The findings are welcome news, for education leaders, though they have cautioned streamlining the visa process will not, on its own, reverse the trend of declining interest among foreigners in attending American colleges and universities. Amid complaints from higher education groups and major busi ness leaders, including Bill Gates, that visa hassles were discouraging foreign students from attending American schools, a Government Accountability Office investigation last year found average delays of 67 days for applicants to clear a security check for scientists known as Visa Mantis. Some de lays were considerably longer, and some applicants waited as long as 12 weeks just to get an interview to start the process. In a follow-up report to be re leased Friday, the GAO finds the av erage wait following the interview has now fallen to 15 days, according to a source who has been briefed on the findings and spoke on condition of anonymity. The report credits the overall im provement to better technology, coor dination among agencies and policy changes, such as priority interviews for student applicants. It cautions that problems remain and some scholars still face considerable delays. The report comes just a week after the government announced it would allow international students to keep their Visa Mantis clearance for the du ration of their studies, up to four years — a change that will likely further re duce delays. Reapplications from those who previously had been cleared were a major bottleneck, and a source of anxiety for applicants, who worried they might be unable to get back to school if forced to return home in an emergency. Peggy Blumenthal, vice president for educational services at the Insti tute of International Education, praised U.S. embassies for making an improved visa process a top priority. Still, public relations challenges remain, she said. “Even more important than the ac tual wait times, which have im proved, is combating the perception abroad by students that the situation is the same as it was shortly after Sept. 11,” she said. “Students right now are going on what they heard from then cousin or friend or neighbor who applied three years ago.” About 600,000 foreigners study in the United States, but international graduate student applications fell 32 percent last year, according to an HE survey. Another survey released in November found the number of first-time foreign enrollees in Ameri can graduate schools was down 6 percent — the third straight decline after a decade of growth. Universities depend on interna tional students for teaching and re search help, particularly in the sci ences. In some fields, including engineering, foreigners comprise more than 50 percent of students. More than 75 percent of their fund ing comes from abroad, and they Student visa application delays reduced A General Accounting Office investigation last year found an average delay of 67 days for foreign student applicants pursuing science to clear security checks. A follow-up report to be released Friday, found the average wait following the interview has dropped to 15 days. Non-immigrant students by region of citizenship, FY 2003 South America 8% ; Unknown Central America 2% M 1 °/o Caribbean 4% Canada and ... Mexico 8% Oceania 1% Africa 3% Europe : 18% Asia 55% Visa processing durations from transmission to response for 67 case applications, 2003* r 19 aps. 21 7 4 15 1-20 21-40 | j 121-220 Days 41-60 61-120 * Students pursuing science ** One application was resent. It took more than 420 days based on the original mailing date. Non-immigrant students by class of admission 700 thousand Fiscal 93 '94 '95 '96 '98 '99 00 '01 '02 '03 year Data for 1997 not available SOURCES: U S. General Accounting Office; U S. Citizenship and Immigration Services AP contribute $12 billion annually to the U.S. economy, according to HE. Visa delays may prove the most easily solvable of the challenges facing U.S. schools. Students from China and India who have tradi tionally gone to the United States are finding better domestic options and are encountering aggressive marketing by schools in Britain, Australia and New Zealand. “Competition is hot and heavy,” Blumenthal said. Gates, the Microsoft founder, and other business leaders, includ ing GE Chief Executive Jeff Immelt, have recently raised the issue, saying it could harm the ability of American companies to recruit the talent they need. Rep. Sherwood Boehlert, R.-N.Y., chairman of the House science com mittee, which requested the report, praised the State Department for moving quickly. “This is very good news,” he said. “Particularly in the aftermath of 9/11, we want to separate those who are interested in coming into the country to do harm and the vast ma jority who are coming into the coun try to study, serve as faculty members or attend a scientific conferences. They all enrich the country.” Israel calls for halt to destruction of Palestinians' houses BY KARIN LAI IB THE ASSOCIATED PRESS JERUSALEM — Israel’s defense minister ordered a halt Thursday to the controversial policy of demolish ing the homes of Palestinian suicide bombers and gunmen after an inter nal army review concluded it has not deterred attackers but has inflamed hatred. Since the 1967 Middle East War, Israel has razed more than 2,400 Palestinian homes as punishment or deterrence, leaving thousands of people homeless, including 675 houses destroyed in the past four years of fighting, according to the Israeli human rights group B’tselem. Human rights groups have con demned the demolitions as collec tive punishment and a violation of international law and long have demanded that they be halted. The army review found the prac tice has inflamed hatred. The Haaretz newspaper said there were no more than 20 cases in which the threat of demolition deterred at tackers or pushed their families to turn them in. Militant groups com pensate families of attackers and help them rebuild, weakening possible deterrence. House demolitions, along with other army practices, such as targeted killings of Palestinian mili tants, were suspended after Israel* Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas declared a truce last week. In announcing the halt to house demolitions, the military said in a statement that Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz decided to accept the recommendation of army Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Moshe Yaalon to “stop exercising the legal right to demol ish terrorists’ houses as a means of deterrence.” A military official said that while the practice had a deterrent effect in some cases, the army “weighed if the deterrent was strong enough in order to continue the policy of the demolition of houses, and the chief of staff ... concluded especially when there’s more quiet, it’s not the time to use this policy.” B’tselem says the Israeli military has destroyed a total of more than 4,000 Palestinian homes during the current conflict, most in opera tions to clear away buildings used by militants as cover for attacks or to widen security roads. Those practices were not included in Thursday’s decision. In the Gaza Strip, 2,991 homes were destroyed or damaged beyond repair in the last four years, leaving some 28,483 people homeless, according to the U.N. Relief and Works Agency. Amnesty International, a leading human rights group, praised Thurs day’s decision but said it did not go far enough. “The overall number of houses that have been demolished in the last four years is in excess of 4,000, and out of those, the category an nounced today was a fairly small category,” said Donatella Rovera, the human rights group’s researcher on Israel and the Palestinian territories. China to dispatch envoy to N. Korea to break stalemate BY ELAINE KURTENBACH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BEIJING — China said Thurs day it will send a top communist party official to North Korea for talks with its longtime ally in an effort to break a stalemate over the North’s nuclear program, but Beijing urged patience in its dealing with the volatile country. U.S. and South Korean envoys visited Beijing to seek help in persuading the isolated North to rejoin six-nation nuclear talks that were suspended in June. Those talks include the United States, the two Koreas, China, Russia and Japan. China, the North’s biggest backer and a major source of aid to the impoverished country, has been wary of openly testing its influence with Pyongyang. China urged patience with the unpredictable North, which has rejected calls to return to the six nation talks, accusing Washington of hostility. Last week, Pyongyang announced it has produced nu clear weapons. The claim could not be independently verified. “We are of the view that we should not resort to sanctions or pressure in international relations,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan said at a regular briefing. “Further complicating the issue will compromise the safety and security of the region.” Kong confirmed that Wang Jiarui, head of the communist party’s international department, would visit North Korea this week, but he did not give specific dates. Meanwhile, South Korean officials said they believed China could do more to win over the North. “I think China has a much bigger card to play than we ex pect. The question is whether it will play it,” South Korea’s ambassador to China, Kim Ha joong, said at a news conference Thursday in Seoul. China, which hosted three ear lier rounds of nuclear talks that re sulted in little progress, has con sistently said it favors a nuclear-free Korean peninsula. Though China helped defend North Korea in the 1950-53 Kore an War, Beijing worries that a nu clear-armed North would raise tensions in the region and prompt Japan and South Korea to develop atomic weapons. While working to resolve the standoff, “the Chinese side requires that the DPRK side and United States show more flexibili ty and sincerity,” Kong said, using the acronym for the North’s formal name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. You’re always close to campus. * www.dailyemeraid.com