2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 10, 1997 NATION/WORLD SITE Continued from Page 1. "I heard the plane go by and it made this sound, there was a big boom," Fleming said. "My house started to shake. Then I saw a whole bunch of smoke coming up." Fleming's older brother also saw the rising smoke. "It sounded like a plane buzzed by, riding real low," said David Fleming. "I looked out the bedroom window and saw black smoke coming out of the trees by the river." "There's no way this could've hap- pened," said Gary Sampson, a Grape resident. "We've been here 20 years and we've never had this experience" Sampson was in his house when he heard the plane crash. "I was at the kitchen window, I had just come up from the basement, when I heard the jet motors;' Sampson said. "The next thing I heard a big explosion and saw smoke and fire" Residents could only guess at why the plane had crashed. "Those commuter planes are known to have problems, they're susceptive to icing;' said Helser, who lives in Grape. "I suspect it just iced up." LSA junior Erik Willer lives near Ida and was surprised to hear of the plane crash. "That was my first concern - was where it landed," Willer said. "As far as major tragedy there's nothing like this that's ever happened." "I ... don't think Dan Rather has ever said Ida, Michigan, until tonight," Willer said. "The only positive out of this is see- ing the speed with which the emer- gency response was made," Helser said. -Daily Staff Reporter Alice Robinson contributed to this report. CRASH Continued from Page 1 woman yelled to security guards who would not let her through. "If this were your family ..." Hogan said friends and relatives of flight 3272 victims gathered at a hotel near the airport where counselors were available. Meanwhile, the expected seven inch- es of snow left many other flights at the airport delayed or cancelled. LSA junior Carrie Del Greco, who stood outside the gate waiting for her friend's United Airlines flight to arrive from India, said the airport seemed "uneasy." Del Greco said the snowy weather worried her and the crash of the Comair flight only increased her tension. "My mom freaked out and called the airport and wanted to know if his flight was the one that crashed," Del Greco said. "We've been waiting here for a few hours and the flight's still not here." While Del Greco's friend eventually returned to Ann Arbor, the passengers of flight 3272 never made it to their destination. As that plane approached Detroit, calm winds and light snow contributed to the 1.75 miles of visibility, said Charles Curran, Comair senior vice president, during a televised news con- ference.0 "This is one of those tough, tough days," Curran said. Curran said there had been no reports of trouble when the flight took off, and the crew was rested. Capt. Dann Carlsen, a Comair pilot since February 1990, had been off from work on Wednesday. Also on the flight were First Officer Kenneth Reece and flight attendant Darinda Ogden. The crew had made one round-trip earlier in the day to Detroit. The Embraer 120 is a Brazilian-built turboprop that can carry up to 30 pas- sengers. There have been three fatal crashes in recent years involving the same model, a plane popular with regional and commuter airlines. Comair owns 40 such planes. The plane was purchased by Comair in February 1992, and there were no maintenance problems at that time, Curran said. The plane was last inspect- ed Nov. 20. According to The Associated Press, Comair has had just one other plane crash, when in 1978, eight people were killed in a passenger plane. - Daily Staff Reporters Stephanie Powell and Jenni Yachnin contributed to this report. Senate probe to view Schwarzkopf logs WASHINGTON - The Senate Veterans Affairs Committee yesterday wonper- mission to examine the personal Persian Gulf War logs of retired Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf in its search for clues on whether U.S. troops were exposed to chem- icals or other toxic agents during the 1991 war. Schwarzkopf, the venerated senior commander of allied troops, said he would allow congressional and Pentagon investigators to look at the volumes "to their hearts' content." But he angrily rejected implications that he would have cove up information on such exposures. News of the request came on the first day of the 105th Congress's hearings on the issue, and offered fresh evidence that Capitol Hill critics, including committee chair Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) and ranking minority member Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) suspect the military still is concealing facts that bear on the search for causes of the so-called Gulf War syndrome. "This is a very serious matter, and a very serious log, which was evidently not at the disposal of (the CIA or the Department of Defense)," Rockefeller said at the hearing. Gulf War syndrome is the generic term for the variety of illnesses and ailments RAMADAN Continued from Page 1. "It is a time of inner reflection and devotion to God," Zahr said. Students and other residents in the area attend Ann Arbor's only mosque - at the Islamic Center of Ann Arbor - on a regular basis, said Carolyn Al- Qadi, principal of the Michigan Islamic Academy. "On a regular Friday, there are about 300 to 500 people packed in here and on holidays there are over 1,000 peo- ple," AI-Qadi said. In addition to praying five times a day, Muslims also say a special prayer during Ramadan. The Tarawih prayers are nighttime prayers that are to be done after the regular daytime prayers. For Tarawih prayers, Muslims do a rit- ual of bowings in sets of eight, 12 or 20. The person leading the prayer will also read one-thirtieth of the Koran, Islam's holy book. During Ramadan, Muslims will do a complete reading of the Koran. he --I 7 I MICHIGAN \istevi. dear 'er ? , - -.3dd Aw~rj AM, -"- - real people, 1 rGUI music, um Zahr also said Ramadan is a time to appreciate what God has given to peo- ple. "The goal is to experience hunger and the feeling of what it is like to be unfortunate," he said. LSA sophomore Bisan Salhi will also be participating in the fast and has done so since she was 13. "It is important because everyone loses track of things with their every- day activities," she said. " It is a time for you to re-evaluate the important values that go along with being a Muslim." Salhi also emphasized that she has a different motivation than some other Muslims. "You should fast for yourself," Salhi said. "It is supposed to be a spiritual cleansing." Ramadan commemorates the time when Mohammed brought the Koran to the people. Muslims believe this was a message sent from God that told the people the criteria for right and wrong. WEB Continued from Page £ including viewpoints that are strange, unorthodox or unpopular. The network administrators place no official sanc- tions upon the expression of personal opinion on the network." Without sanctions, "he should be protected to say whatever his opin- ion," said Virginia Rezmierski, asso- ciate to the vice provost for informa- tion technology at the University of Michigan. Rezmierski said there are almost no laws governing a private entity's use of the Internet, which would allow Northwestern to censor its pages. "If they are private, they can basically do what they want to do," she said, adding that Northwestern may even have the right to read others' e-mail. That is not the case with public insti- tutions, which are bound by the First Amendment, Rezmierski said. However, Internet material must still have certain standards. "The University has a set of gate- way policies," said Sandra Colombo, project area manager for Information Resources and Access Products. These gateway policies are a compi- lation of existing university policies. "We are trying to make these avail- able to the campus," Colombo said. Users must, of course, follow federal and state law when using the University server, keeping obscene material such as child pornography off the pages. The University of Michigan is in the process of making it clearer to Internet users which pages are "official pages" of the University and which are "per- sonal pages" R LUGIOU$ A.VAVAVAVA that thousands of Gulf war veterans have conflict. Grapes may have anti-cancer agents A new suggestion from cancer researchers is: Go for the grapes. In searching for chemicals that can prevent cancer, scientists in Chicago have found that ordinary grapes contain resveratrol, a possible anti-cancer agent. The chemical is also found, in smaller amounts, in wine, but because of the overuse of alcohol, the researchers think the best source is just a bunch of grapes, especially red ones. "Of all the plants we've tested, and all the compounds we've seen, this one has the greatest promise" as a natural weapon to protect against cancer, said pharmacologist John Pezzuto, of the University of Chicago. Resveratrol was found in more than 70 different plants, but it is especially prominent in grapes. The researchers also tested wine, and found resveratrol to be most prominent in red wine, but also present in rose and white wines. Their report appears in this week's issue of Science magazine. Wine scientists were not greatly impressed with the new results, however. I you canl fiigt noVw ohr' J1 sfev 13 complained of since returning frog- According to wine chemist Andrew Waterhouse, resveratrol "is not a new compound. It was discovered in 1924, and was identified in grapes in 1974." Reich says income gap is still a threat 0 WASHINGTON - Three days after President Clinton proclaimed the United States "on the cusp" of revers- ing its worst social problems, his outgo- ing Labor secretary sent up an unusual- ly public word of caution, warning yes- terday that the continuing gap between rich and poor "threatens to blight an otherwise promising future." With pointed references to the pr- ident's campaign rhetoric, Rob Reich, a trusted member of Clinton's inner circle and one of his administra- tion's more liberal Cabinet secretaries, reminded Clinton not to overlook the "unfinished agenda" created by inequality within the U.S. economy. "The bridge to America's future must first traverse the chasm of inequality" Reich said. Chernomyrdin decided against abandon- ing his vacation to take up the reins of leadership dropped by the ailing Yeltsin. Chernomyrdin called Yeltsin at the Central Clinical Hospital and discussd matters of national concern for ab 15 minutes. Robotic insects are a wave of the future TOKYO - A big brown cockroach crawls across the table in the laboratory of Japan's most prestigious university. The researcher eyes it nervously, but doesn't go for the bug spray. He grn the remote. This roach has been surgically implant- ed with a micro-robotic backpack that allows researchers to control its move- ments. "The potential applications of this work for mankind could be immense," said Professor Isao Shimoyama. Within a few years electronically con- trolled insects could be used for sensitive missions - like crawling through earth- quake rubble to search for victims. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. Yeltsin's health worries Russians MOSCOW - In a campaign to allay fears that Russian President Boris Yeltsin is on his death bed, government officials and Kremlin doctors struck a not-to-worry pose yesterday as the frail leader of this nuclear-armed power lay in the hospital with pneumonia. But the moves to temper reaction to the latest warning that the Yeltsin administration may be nearing an end backfired with the business world and the president's shrill opponents. After a swell of investor confidence sent Russian stock prices soaring by as much as 30 percent earlier this week, the markets were aflutter yes- terday after word spread that the pres- ident's health woes had once again sidelined him from the Kremlin. The most nervous sectors were those involving foreign business interests, which lost 7 percent to 10 percent of their values, the Interfax Financial Information Agency reported. Perhaps as a counterpoint to the mar- ket jitters and mutterings of political rivals, Prime Minister Viktor phone: 663.5800 114a s uth university (above goodtime chadeys), AA -I I i mon.-thurs.: 9:00-10:00p fri. & sat.: 9:00-1 1:00p sundays 11:00a-8:OOp " u, I W. . N ,..... tJEW gELeAS ESI of ew IVItes54v see Vr - es 4ot -fi~~e fi J~ very, vet --i .(~~e 1cvf adI' Ca owb UCAU$It YWuLOOt fM i7h#:r* friom SAtMIG INTO MAo the Debut Album 1 1fA1(iVA, h11EV DE GRAT(frUL Wfih ' VOUIICfDAD asm ++xiil I 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 sub- 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. ram Elias, Megan Exley, Maria Hackett, Jennifer Harvey. Heather Kamins. Jeffrey Kosseff, Marc Lightdale, Laurie Mayk, Chris Metinko, 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 Laiser, 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 McCahili, Danielle Rumore. Barry Sollenberger. STAFF: Nancy Berger, T.J. Berka, Evan Braunstein. Chris Farah, Jordan Field, John Friedberg. Kim Hart, Kevin Kasiborski, Josh Kleinbaum, Andy Knudsen, Andy Latack, Fred Link, B.J. Luria, Brooke McGahey, Afshin Mohamadi, Sharat Raju. Pranay Reddy; Jim Rose, Tracy SanJler, Richard Shin, Mark Snyder, Nita Srivastava, Dan Stillman, Jacob Wheeler, Ryan White. ARTS Brian A. Gnatt, Jennifer P tinski, Editors WEEKEND. ETC. EDITORS: Greg Parker, Elan A. Stavros. SUB EDITORS: Lise Harwin (Music). HaeJin Kim (Campus Arts), Bryan Lark (Film), Elizabeth Lucas (Books), Kelly Xintaris (TV/New Media). STAFF: Colin Bartos, Eugene Bowen, Anitha Chalam. Kari Jones. Brian M. Kemp. Emily Lambert, Kristin Long, James Miller, Evelyn Miska, Aaron Rennie, Julia Shih, Philip Son, Prashant Tamaskar. Christopher Tkaczyk, Angela Walker. PHOTO Mark Friedman, Sara Stilman, Editors 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 Jason Hoyer, Editor iwv days. 1v4t UDC 40 A " ale "v/ att ecm *e &f o4 epic ook& . sr stuff a, . salenowil Ch-ilIk "0 rt CAMPUS CHAPEL a Christian Reformed ministry 1236 Washtenaw Ct. 668-7421 Pastor Don Postema 662-2404 SUNDAY WORSHIP 10 am: "Hope for the New Year" 6 pm: Sunday Forum WEDNESDAYS 9 pm: University Student Group Ms. Kyla Ebels, Student Ministry CANTERBURY HOUSE Episcopal Ministry at the University of Michigan STAFF: Lydia Alspach, Allyson Huber, Jill Litwin, Heather Miller. Matt Spewak, David Ward, Jen Woodward. ONLINEA STAFF: Jeffrey Greenstein, Charles Harrison, Anuj Hasija, Vamshi Thandra, Scott Wilcox, Anthony Zak. GRAPHICS7 Adam Pollock, Editor Tracey Harris, Editor "R...,m Fm.", i I I 111111 I II I " I . I