2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, December 6, 1996 -NATION/WORLD Rockefeller Center hit by explosion in Christm ru NEW YORK (AP) - An explosion at Time Warner's headquarters building in Rockefeller Center yesterday rattled windows and startled pedestrians crowding the area to view the famous Christmas tree. Three people were injured in the blast, which appeared to have originat- ed in a restaurant on the building's sec- ond floor. They were hospitalized in sta- ble condition, said Mike Raciopo, a fire department spokesperson. Willie Monroe, who works in the kitchen of TGI Friday's, said he saw a ball of fire, and then "suddenly the whole restaurant was just shaking." "People were just running out. They just panicked," said Monroe, adding that there were more than 100 people, including a lot of children, in the restau- rant at the time. k. x .. r Et.PORT Clinton, Yeltsin to meet in March WASHINGTON - Cold War clamor far behind them, President Clinton and President Boris Yeltsin will meet in the United States next March to go about building what Clinton calls "a new partnership with democratic Russia." The meeting will be their first in 11 months. Since their last , one, Yeltsin won re-election, in July, and Clinton did in November, the same month Yeltsin had major, evidently suc- cessful heart surgery. The date and location were not announced yesterday. Word of the get-together surfaced as Clinton decided on an overhaul of his national security team that will install U.N. Ambassador Clinton Madeleine Albright as secretary of state and Sandy Berger as head of the National Security Council. At a White House news conference, Clinton stressed one of his top objectives in his second term was "building a new partnership with a democratic Russia." At the State Department, Secretary of State Warren Christopher spoke of a "real advantage" in direct contact between the two leaders. He said Russia's decision send troops to help maintain peace in Bosnia resulted from their October 1 summit at Hyde Park, N.Y. The blast reverberated through nearby office buildings, including the headquar- ters of The Associated Press, and briefly sent black smoke billowing from the roof of the skyscraper shortly after 7 p.m. "There was a loud sound like light- ning hitting the building. I thought the Friday's kitchen exploded. I saw debris coming down from the building," said Anton Ruskaj, working across the street at the Fashion Cafe. "People were coming out with soot and burns," Ruskaj added. "Other employees came out screaming for medical help. There was a lot of panic. The victims seemed terrified." People crowded onto Rockefeller Plaza, which was filled with people viewing the tree and going to Radio City Musical Hall for its Christmas show. AP PHOTO An emergency service worker helps an unidentified person Injured at the Time Warner building in Rockefeller Center yesterday. AJfirigan gJamma Tau Beta Pi, the National Engineering Honor Society, was founded to mark in a fitting manner those who have conferred honor upon their Alma Mater by distinguished scholarship and exemplary character as students in engineering, or by their attainments as alumni in the field of engineering, and to foster a spirit of liberal culture in engineering colleges. We, the officers and faculty advisors of the Michigan Gamma Chapter of Tau Beta Pi, wish to congratulate the following people who have achieved our high standards and have successfully completed the initiation rituals, thereby becoming active members of Tau Beta Pi: Shahaf Abileah Kathy Anderson Michael Bailey Jeffrey Becker Scott Benigni Heidi Best Joseph Black Matthew Bucciero Benjamin Bulat James Carey Walter Carlson Sara Chakel Michael Chang Jonathan Cherry Shan-Ming Chiu Brady Countryman Parag Desai Kim Dillon Jennifer Dunn Ekrem Esmen Michael Farina Jonathan Galow John Geis Patrick Gipson Bryan Jampton Debra Hausman Thomas Hughes Lisa Ingall Brandon Johnson Bradley Kean Tara Keefover Suzanne Kohrs Thomas Komjathy Benita Kuo Aaron Leanhardt Harry Lee Andrew Lipnik Joanna London Jennifer Ma Brian Makins Karin Marcinkowski Brian Maskery Nathan Mather Angela Merrill Lindsay Morga Brenda Newton David Nori Jonathan Opdyke Katherine Patek Paul Perkins Styliani Petroudi Amber Pewe Elizabeth Quenneville Ronit Reager Jaime Roehrig Jeffrey Sanko Thomas Schwarz Jonathan Seddelmeyer Kathryn Shaw Daniel Singer Katherine Stellhorn Mark Strohmaier Arul Thirumoorthi Grace Tong Thomas Warren Marie Wiescinski Stuart Wuerthele SEARCHES Continued from Page 1 than a quorum of its own members to the panel, but they could not form a majority of the committee. The second bill keeps closed the applications and other records regard- ing all candidates, even after the final- ists are named. Regent Philip Power (D-Ann Arbor), who testified to the House Higher Education Committee on Tuesday, said the search to hire Lee Bollinger was successful in spite of the Open Meetings Act, not because of it. "Because of the way the Open Meetings Act has evolved over the past 20 years, Michigan is now regarded by leaders in higher education around the country as a crazy place, not at all where you want to go to be considered for a university presidency," Power told the committee. Law Dean Jeffrey Lehman, who chaired the Presidential Search Advisory Committee and also testified in the committee hearing, said last night the proposed time constraints put new and restrictive limits on the con- duct of a search. "The rough outline that I've received leaves me deeply concerned about whether any outsider to the University, with any appropriate experience, would be willing to par- ticipate in a process constrained in that manner," Lehman said. Wilbanks said that despite some portions of the current bills, they will ultimately improve the University's flexibility in conducting searches. "There is certainly ... an improve- ment in the way the search will be con- ducted," Wilbanks said. She said the bill has changed shape in its passage through the legislature, and could change again before its final version is approved. John Truscott, spokesperson for Gov. John Engler, said he was not familiar with the amendment's details, but said the governor sup- ports the bill in theory. Truscott also said there needs to be time for the public to properly scruti- nize and give its input on the candi- dates' qualifications. He said Engler would have no objections if the earlier stages of the search happen behind closed doors, as long as the final stages are public. Schwarz, who is a University alum, said he had no predictions for when the bill will pass and what its final form will be like, "I wouldn't even begin to speculate on what a legislature may and may not do in a lame-duck session;" Schwarz said. U.N.: Chemical agents at Iraqi dump WASHINGTON - U.N. investiga- tors have confirmed the presence of the deadly chemical agent sarin at the site of an Iraqi weapons dump blown up by Americans during the Persian Gulf War, the Pentagon said yesterday. "They drilled into a rocket and sarin spurted out of that rocket," Bernard Rostker, the Pentagon's coordinator for Gulf War illnesses, said. "So sarin was present, and they did find a cache of mustard gas.' The Pentagon has previously spoken of chemical agent canisters found by U.N. investigators at the site of the Kamisiyah ammuniiton d pot, but the detail of sarin shooting out of one of the rockets provided graphic evidence of the chemical's presence. Many Gulf War veterans blame chemical or biological weapon expo- sure for a series of unexplained illness- es with symptoms that include memory loss, joint and muscle pain, depression, skin rashes and chronic fatigue. The Pentagon and the Department of Veterans Affairs, after a slow start, have acknowledged a serious health problem exists and are conducting extensive studies. Other possible causes being examined include experimental vac- cines, parasites, environmental pollu- tants, and stress and psychological fag tors. Brain chemical gives clue to curb hunger WASHINGTON - Blocking a cer- tain brain chemical can curb appetites, researchers find, giving a new clue on how to slim from grossly obese to merely chubby. The work helps explain why a flawed "fat gene" turO middleweights into extreme heavy- weights. New research with mice that are genetically altered to be extremely obese shows that the weight gain is con- trolled, in part, by the action of a brain chemical called neuropeptide Y, or NPY, according to Jay Erickson, a Howard Hughes Institute researcher at the University of Washington. --- U r Serbia makes conciliatory gestures BELGRADE, Yugoslavia - The Serbian government, making concilia- tory gestures in the face of mounting street protests, allowed two indepen- dent radio stations to resume broadcasts yesterday and signaled willingness to consider acknowledging the electoral victory of opposition parties in two of Yugoslavia's biggest cities. The decisions marked the first signs of political flexibility from President Slobodan Milosevic and his govern- ment in 18 straight days of demonstra- tions and intense pressure from the United States and other Western gov- ernments for a peaceful resolution of the crisis. They came one day after the Clinton administration voiced determi- nation to relay broadcasts from a silenced station via the Voice of America and made clear that Washington no longer considers the Serbian leader indispensable for peace in the Balkans. In one sign of the conciliatory shift, VORLD ': INTERNSHIPS "GAIN A WORLD OF EXPERIENCE" We need six top-notch students to sell yellow page advertising in the campus telephone directory during the summer of 1997. This is a summer job in Ann Arbor, open to freshmen, sophomores, juniors, seniors and graduate students who are not in summer school. Our most successful interns have good skills in presenting, closing, time management and organization. Persistence, an interest in sales and an outgoing nature is also important. Business majors must bid for interviews by December 6. AU other majors go to Career Center by December 6. Interviews will be held at The School of Business on January 13 and at the Career Center on January 14. Zivadin Jovanovic, an assistant foreign minister, declined to comment when asked if Milosevic's ruling Socialist Party had won the Nov. 17 election in the southern city of Nis. This cast doubts a victory announced on state-run televi- sion two weeks ago and amounted to acknowledgment that the government is considering another outcome to the race. Western Wall shown live on the Internet JERUSALEM - Millions of Internet users around the world we able to watch as the first candle of Hanukkah was lit last night at the Western Wall, Judaism's holiest site. The Israeli Internet company Virtual Jerusalem added "The Wall Cam" to its services, which include delivering e- mail with prayers to the Wall. The site opens Thursday. The address for the Virtual Jerusalem Wall-Cam Web site is http://www.virtual.co.il. - Compiled from Daily wire report RELIGIOU$ SERVICES AVAVAVAVA CAMPUS CHAPEL Christian Reformed Campus Ministry 1236 Washtenaw Ct. 668-7421 (one block south of CCRB) SUNDAY: 10a.m.- Advent Worship Rev. Don Postema, Pastor Ms. Kyla Ebels assistant for Student Ministry KOREAN CHURCH OF ANN ARBOR 3301 Creek Dr. 971-9777 SUNDA Y: 9:30 a.m. English, 11 a.m. & 7:30 p.m. Korean LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH 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 fail term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, yearlong (September through April) is $165. On-campus sub> scriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a Miember of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. j ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-0AILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647.3336; 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. World Wide Web: http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/. EDITORIAL STAFF Ronnie Glassberg, Editor In Chief NEWS Amy Klein, Managing Editor EDITORS: Tim O'Connell, Megan Schimpf, Michelle Lee Thompson, Josh White. STAFF: Janet Adamy, Brian Campbell, Prachish Chakravorty, Anita Chik. Jodi S. Cohen, Jeff Eldridge, Bram Elias, Megan Exley, Jennifer Harvey. Heather Kamins, Jeffrey Kosseff, Marc Ughtdale, Laurie Mayk, Chris Metinko. Heather Miller, Katie Plona, Stephanie Powell, Anupama Reddy, Alice Robinson, Matthew Rochkind, David Rossman, Matthew Smart. Ericka M. Smith, Ann Stewart, Ajit K. Thavarajah, Katie Wang, Will Weissert, Jenni Yachnin. EDITORIAL Adrienne Janney, Zachary M. Raimi, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Erin Marsh, Paul Serilla. STAFF: Emily Achenbaum, Ellen Friedman, Samuel Goodstein, Katie Hutchins, Scott Hunter, Yuki Kuniyuki, Jim Lasser, David Levy, Christopher A. McVety, James Miller, Partha Mukhopadhyay, Jack Schillaci, Ron Steiger, Matt Wimsatt. EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Jason Stoffer. SPORTS Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Managing Editor EDITORS: Alan Goldenbach, John Leroi, Will McCahil, Danielle Rumore, Barry Sollenberger. STAFF: Nancy Berger, T.J. Berka. Evan Braunstein, Chris Farah. Jordan Field, John Friedberg, James Goldstein, KinrHart, Kevin Kasiborski, Josh Kleinbaum, Andy Knudsen, Andy Latack, Fred Link, B.J. Luria, Brooke McGahey, Afshin Mohamadi. Sharat Raju, Pranay Reddy. Jim Rose, Tracy Sandler, Richard Shin, Mark Snyder, Nita Srivastava, Dan Stillman, Jacob Wheeler, Ryan White. ARTS Brian A. Gnatt, Joshua Rich, Editors WEEKEND. ETC. EDITORS: Greg Parker. Elan A. Stavros. SUB-EDITORS: Dean Bakopoulos (Fine Arts), Use Harwin (Music), Tyler Patterson (Theater), Jen Petlinski (Film). STAFF: Colin Bartos, Eugene Bowen, Anitha Chalam, Kari Jones, Brian M. Kemp, Hae-Jin Kim. Stephanie Jo Klein, Emily Lambert, Bryan Lark, Kristin Long, Elizabeth Lucas, James Miller, Evelyn Miska, Aaron Rennie, Julia Shih, Philip Son, Prashant Tamaskar, Christopher Tkaczyk. Angela Walker,.Kelly Xintaris. PHOTO Mark Friedman, Editor ASSISTANT EDITOR: Sara Stillman. STAFF: Josh Biggs, Jennifer Bradley-Swift, Aja Dekleva Cohen, John Kraft, Margaret Myers, Jully Park, Damian Petrescu, Kristen Schaefer Jeannie Servaas, Jonathan Summer, Joe Westrate,Warren Zinn. COPY DESK Elizabeth Lucas, Editor STAFF: Lydia Alspach, Jason Hoyer, Allyson Huber, Jill Litwin, Heather Miller, Matt Spewak, David Ward, Jen Woodward. ONLINE Scott Wilcox, Editor STAFF: Dana Goldberg, Jeffrey Greenstein, Charles Harrison, Anuj Hasija, Adam Pollock, Vamshi Thandra, Anthony Zak. GRAPHICS Melanie Sherman, Editor BUINS STF Ei . . .r usnssMna r I II