2A - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 6, 1996 NATION/WORLD Surgeons: Full recovery for Yeltsin MOSCOW (AP) - Boris Yeltsin's heart bypass surgery was pronounced a success yesterday and surgeons predict- ed a full recovery, easing anxiety that has hobbled Russia for months. Yeltsin could take back his powers and the nuclear button in two days, but may not go back to his office until the new year. The operation lasted seven hours and involved five bypasses. Yeltsin regained consciousness about five hours later, was heavily sedated and was still on a respirator to guard against postopera- tive complications. Doctors said they couldn't predict when he could leave the hospital. Hundreds of thousands of Russians took to the streets yesterday, showing that President Boris Yeltsin faces more troubles even if he fully recovers from heart bypass surgery. Teachers, factory workers, miners and members of the military - the backbone of the nation in Soviet days, but now the stragglers in Russia's race for wealth - organized a nationwide day of protest against the government's failure to pay their wages virtually since the day Yeltsin was re-elected four months ago. "Maybe when he (Yeltsin) gets over this operation, he will be in a better position to feel our pain and do some- thing about it," said Eduard A. Polyakov, a union activist. By coinci- dence, Yeltsin's surgery occurred the same day as the protests, which had been scheduled two weeks earlier. Michigan's Premier Multi-Tap is also Michigan's Best Whiskey Selection 50 Scotch Single Malts * 13 Small Batch Bourbons Wednesday is: Whiskey & Cigar Night 8-11 pm Each week a featured 5 pack whiskey sampler and a cigar only $20 Limit 20 persons, tickets available in advance Interior Ministry figures showed that nearly 320,000 people took part in protests held in dozens of cities nationwide. Dr. Renat Akchurin, leader of the 12-man sur- gical team thatk conducted the coronary artery bypass operation, would not specify the number of Yeltsin bypasses, saying only it "significantly exceeded" the three or four doctors initially had spec- ulated might be necessary. Dr. George Noon of Houston, who was among the consultants who flew to Moscow to observe the surgery, said early today that Yeltsin had five bypasses. Doctors said Yeltsin's blood circula- tion had been improved significantly. Yeltsin's long illness has left Russia with a part-time leader at best and spawned power struggles among presi- dential wannabes. Financial markets trembled at rumors about his health and the government, by many accounts, was near paralysis. Dr. Yevgeny Chazov, head of the Moscow Cardiological Center where the operation was performed, said there were no complications during the surgery. Dr. Michael DeBakey, the American heart surgery pioneer who is a consultant on the case and who trained Akchurin, declared it a success. "I would predict the president to be x AUSTRALIA 0 CANADA 0 CHILE 0 CHINA o * ~oIp - O11 ' INFORMATION ,j MEETING about x0 e STUDY ABROAD TODAY: a Wednesday, November 6 Academic Year Programs in GREAT BRITAIN a from 5:00 to 6:00 p.m. in 1408 Mason Hall o 0 For more information, contact: The Office of International Programs, G513 Michigan Union, o 764-4311. . k 0I O NYHlI1 O VISINONI 0 )0A 9NfH o able to return to his office and perform his duty in perfectly normal fashion," said DeBakey, who watched the opera- tion on a monitor outside the operating room with a team of American and German consultants. It could be a day or two before Yeltsin, 65, is well enough to reclaim the presidential powers, including con- trol over Russia's immense nuclear arsenal, that he handed off to Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin before the surgery. "He is going to decide that for him- self," a weary Akchurin told reporters. "Most probably it will happen tomor- row or the day after." President Clinton's spokesperson, Mike McCurry, said Chernomyrdin called Clinton yesterday to report that the operation "had gone well and President Yeltsin is doing well." Clinton expressed "the very best wishes of the American people to President Yeltsin," McCurry said. Akchurin said Yeltsin would likely remain on a respirator overnight tomin- imize the chance of complications. The president's postoperative treatment depends on how soon Yeltsin is breath- ing on his own, he said. A presidential spokesperson said Yeltsin regained consciousness but was heavily sedated. Yeltsin was on a heart-lung machine for 68 minutes during surgery, Akchurin said. The president's illness has tested the frankness of the Kremlin, a hulking fortress that for centuries has hoarded information about Russia's leaders with an implacable zeal. Yeltsin concealed a heart attack right before he was re-elected in July, then waited until September to tell the nation he needed surgery. That burst of open- ness, however, was followed by a pauci- ty of information that proved a breeding ground for ugly rumors and the naked ambition of would-be successors. Throughout it all, Yeltsin and his men insisted that the president was still in charge - an assertion the president's foes openly mocked. For ordinary people, the most direct result of the convoluted political drama was a government cash crisis triggered in part by the uncertainty of a presiden- tial election followed by a grave presi- dential illness. SPRZNG BREAK '97 Studies show breast cancer drug benefits WASHINGTON - The lifesaving benefit of taking tamoxifen to treat early breast cancer lasts for at least a decade, but only if the drug is used for five years and no longer, two studies showed. The studies, being published today in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, found that women who took tamoxifen for five years after early breast cancer surgery had about an 18- percent better chan'ce of surviving with- out relapse than patients who did not take the drug. One study showed that taking the drug for longer than five years con- ferred no survival advantage and could risk other disorders. Experts praised the studies as provid- ing important new insight into how to treat breast cancer at its earliest stages. "These studies are extremely valu- able," Dr. Sandra Swain said, a cancer specialist at the Comprehensive Breast Center in Washington. She said the findings now leave little question about the value of tamoxifen. "In clinics all over the world, every- one will be using tamoxifen for five years now for sure," she said. "That is of major significance." State sued for 0 license plate denial OAKLAND, Calif. - The state Department of Motor Vehicles has been hit with a $5 million discrimination law- suit for refusing to give a man with AIDS a license plate reading "HIV POS." "I expected to encounter some big- otry, but I didn't expect it at the s DMV," said Kevin Dimmick, who sup on Friday in federal court. Dimmick, leader of a support group for HIV-positive heterosexuals, was denied the personalized plate because it "would be offensive to a significant number of Californians and insensitive to many people with HIV," said DMV spokesman Evan Nossoff. Last year, the department withdrew a plate reading "H IV NEG" after rece ing complaints. Miss. goveor injured in car accident JACKSON, Miss. - Gov. Kirk Fordice was seriously injured yesterday when he flipped his car on an interstate and was pulled from the burning wreckage. "The fire was right there around him," said William Lowe, a truck driver who helped pull the governor from the Jeep Grand Cherokee. He said the 62-year-old Fordice was unconscious. Rescuers had to break into to vehicle, puncture the inflated air bag and cut through the seat belt to pull him free. Fordice was alone in the car. Doctors said his injuries did not appear life-threatening, but he suffered fractured ribs, a collapsed left lung, cuts on his left shoulder and a nearly severed left ear. Fordice regained consciousness by the time he arrived at Grenada Lake Medical Center, about 15 miles south of the accident site in northern Mississippi. He was taken to a Jackson hospital 100 miles to the south. Fordice, a Republican, was elected to a second term last year. He was en route to Jackson for a GOP election night gathering. Lowe said truckers offered fire extinguishers to put out the fire while Fordice was being freed. "After we got him out and laid him on a bank, he was moaning and groaning He was fighting us and wanting to get up," Lowe said. "We had to fight him the whole time until the ambulance got there.' great scores... Law School Business School Dental School Graduate School Medical School great teachers... Kaplan helps you focus ytos.ur test p rep study where you need t Ost r teachers will show you the proven skills and test-taking techniques to help you get a higher score. ... l 1-800-KAP-TEST ti rte #n ,. //yy.. ar, ,r. " 'c$w e $ 1 h r FREE Parties FREE Meals FREE Activities Student Express, Inc 1.800.SURFS UP Zairian rebel says goal is to liberate GOMA, Zaire -To hear rebel chief- tain Andre Ngandu Kissasse tell it, the civil war boiling in eastern Zaire is not about ethnic Hutus or Tutsis, or about regional secession or even about more than 1 million fleeing refugees. "Our objective is to liberate our country," Kissasse, a rebel military commander, explained here yesterday in a dingy villa-turned-rebel headquar- ters. "We want to liberate Kinshasa." Kinshasa, Zaire's capital, is about 1,200 miles to the west through dense rain forests with few roads. And the guerrilla force holding this jittery bor- der city appeared to consist mostly of roving bands of armed men, some clearly drunk, and child-soldiers, some barely taller than their assault rifles. The rebels have set up a base in a beer warehouse, and their control of Goma appeared tenuous at best. Gunshots occasionally echoed in the steamy afternoon heat as four guerrillas looted cases of whiskey and beer from the now-pillaged Nyeri Hotel. More than 1 million Rwandan refugees fled during the rebel offensive. Most of them are believed to have moved deeper into Zaire. Bhutto under vr" house arrest ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -With only her three children and her mother at her side, Benazir Bhutto remained under vir- tual house arrest yesterday after being dismissed as Pakistan's prime minister by President Farooq Leghari. Soldiers with assault rifles patrol the gates outside Bhutto's home, barring her.former ministers from visiting her. "She wants to meet with her party people, her central committee, the press, but she can't," complained a political ally, Aftab Sherpao. Bhutto also was deprived of counsel from her husband, Asif Ali Zardari A central figure in many allegations of cor- ruption, Zardari reportedly was arrested earlier in the day along with other me bers of Bhutto's Pakistan People's Pa. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 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, yearlong (September through April) is $165. On-campus sti scriptions 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 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/. 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 Lightdale, 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, Edit9 ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Erin Marsh. STAFF: Emily Achenbaum, Ellen Friedman, Samuel Goodstein, Katie Hutchins, Scott Hunter, Yuki Kuniyuki, Jim Lasser, David Levy, Christopher A. McVety, James Miller, Partha Mukhopadhyay, Steven Musto, Jack Schillaci, Paul Serilla, Ron Steiger, Jason Stoffer, Matt Wimsatt. SPORTS Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Managing Editor EDITORS: Alan Goldenbach, John Leroi, Danielle Rumore, Barry Sollenberger. STAFF: Nancy Berger, T.J. Berka, Chris Farah, Jordan Field, John Friedberg, James Goldstein. Kim Hart, Kevin Kasiborski, Josh Kleinbaum, Andy Knudsen, Will McCahill, Brooke McGahey, Afshin Mohamadi, Sharat Raju, Pranay Reddy, Jim Rose, Richard Shin, Mark Snyder, 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), Lise Harwin (Music), Tyler Patterson (Theater), Jen Petlinski (Film). STAFF: Colin Bartos. Eugene Bowen, Anitha Chalam, Melanie Cohen, Mark Feldman, Stephanie Glickman, Hae-Jin Kim, Kari Jones, Brian M. Kemp, Stephanie Jo Klein. Emily Lambert, Bryan Lark, Kristin Long, Elizabeth Lucas, James Miller, Aaron Rennie, Julia Shih, Prashant Tamaskar, Christopher Tkaczyk, Angela Walker, Kelly Xintaris. PHOTO Mark Friedman, Edi 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, Jill Litwin, Heather Miller, Adreanne Mispelon, Anupama Reddy, 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. The Financial Markets and Trading Program is teaching the markets every day. Created and tor t 1,vth, l- ;"rnr..titnmef In the IIT's Stuart School of Business also offers a range of other business programs including: MR A . Mater of Environmental Man-