2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 19, 1998 NATION/WORLD Air Force bomber crashes; crew members survive AROUND THE NATION '- _ MARION, Ky. (AP) - An Air Force B-I B bomber, flying unmanned after its crew ejected safely minutes earlier, plowed into a muddy cow pasture and exploded yesterday in rural western Kentucky. The plane barely missed a farm- house, crashing just four miles from this farming community of 3,300 peo- ple. No one was hurt on the ground. The unmanned, unarmed bomber flew roughly 12 miles after its crew bailed out. "It's scary to think about a plane flying over town without anybody at the controls, just waiting to fall somewhere," Mayor Michael Alexander said. Two crew members walking along the road were picked by a passerby in a car, while another was found walking in a field nearby. The fourth's parachute caught in a tree and he suffered head and neck injuries. Randy Rushing, a volunteer fire- fighter responding to the crash call, said he picked up the co-pilot after he found him in the field. "He mainly said that something went haywire," Rushing said. Rushing said the co-pilot, identi- fied as Capt. Jeffrey Sabella, told him the crew was aborting the mis- sion to fly back to their base when there was smoke and they lost con- trol. The co-pilot told Rushing: "We bailed." The Air Force identified the crew as Lt, Col. Daniel Charchian, the instructor pilot; Sabella, the co- pilot; Capt. Kevin Schields, the instructor weapons officer; and I st Lt. Bert Winslow, the weapons sys- tem officer. Charchian and Schields were in good condition at a military hospital at Fort Campbell, Ky. The other two were reported stable at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn. The B-iB bomber was flying out of Dyess Air Force Base near Abilene, Texas, when it went down near Mattoon, a rural area five miles north- east of Marion near the Ohio River, said First Lt. Eric Elliott of Langley Air Force Base in Virginia. The bomber was not being dis- patched to the Persian Gulf and was not carrying munitions, Air Force officials said. Military police from Fort Campbell, Ky., were securing the scene. There was no immediate word as to a cause. State police said the plane went down around 1:15 p.m. Mark Williams, who lives about a quarter mile away, said he was pick- ing up his mail when he heard an explosion, looked up and saw a mushroom-shaped cloud. The blast shook his pickup truck. Williams drove to the crash site and said the biggest piece of wreck- age could fit in the bed of his pick- up, while the rest was reduced to pieces slightly larger than a dinner plate. Jamie Riley saw the plane pass over the town of Mexico, about 14 miles from the crash site, and told the weekly Crittenden Press that the bomber was about 200 feet above the treetops. "I don't see how it was high enough for anybody to bail out," Riley said. Beverly Herrin told the newspaper the engines quit near Marion. "I heard it roaring and looked toward Marion," he said. "By the time it came into sight, everything was quiet. It was gliding at about a 20-degree angle." The B-1 B "Lancer" bomber, one of three long-range heavy bombers in the Air Force arsenal, has adjustable, swept-back wings and can fly intercon- Cinton's dose adviser testifies before juY WASH INGTON - Long-time Clinton confidant Bruce Lindsey testified before a grand jury in the Monica Lewinsky investigation yesterday amid indications the advis- er may have urged a key potential witness last summer to contact President Clinton's private lawyer. Lindsey, who has been with Clinton since the early days of Clinton's political career in Arkansas, spoke at least twice last summer with former White House staffer Lin4 Tripp, according to individuals familiar with Tripp's account of the matter. It was Tripp who brought the allegations of a presidential affair and cover-up to light after secretly taping her conversations with Lewinsky. In one conversation, these individuals said, Lindsey tried to persuade Tripp to go see Robert Bennett, the lawyer Clinton hired to represent him in the Paula Jones sexual harassment case. These sources, discussing the case only on grounds of anonymity, said Tripp's lawyer advised her not to do so and she didn't. The information surfaced as Lindsey appeared before the federal grand jury for questioning. The White House adviser's testimony was interrupted for about 45 minutes as he and his attorney, Deputy White House counsel Cheryl Mill. appeared before U.S. District Judge Norma Holloway Johnson. The nature of t conference was not immediately known. Baseball broadcaster Harry Caray dies RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. -Harry Caray, who took millions of fans out to the ball game on radio and television in a career that spanned almost 60 years, died yesterday, four days after collapsing at a Valentine's Day dinner. He was believed to be 77. The often offbeat Hall of Fame broad- caster covered baseball's greats from Musial to Mays to Maddux. "Holy Cow!" as he would say. He was hospitalized Saturday after falling ill at a nightclub-restaurant with his wife, Dutchie. Doctors said his heart had suddenly changed rhythm, restrict- ing oxygen to his brain. A broadcaster since 1941, Caray became a household name through his Cubs' games for WGN-TV, carried nationally by many cable systems. He was immediately recognizable for his thick, oversized glasses and raspy, sing- along rendition of "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" over the public address sys- tem during the seventh-inning stretch. AP PHOTO The debris of an Air Force 1B-1 bomber that crashed in Kentucky yesterday is strewn in a muddy cow pasture. Caray was a broadcaster for the St. Louis Cardinals for 25 years and for the Chicago White Sox for 11 years before moving across town to Wrigley Field' in 1982. DNC funding repor to be released soon WASHINGTON -After almost $3:5 million and a year of investigation in Asia and in this country, the Senate panel probing campaign finance abuses still cannot answer many fundamental ques- tions about former Democratic Party fund-raiser John Huang. These questions are sprinkled throughout the 1,500-page draft report by the Senate Governmental Affai* Committee's GOP majority. The final document is scheduled to be released next week, when Congress returns from its Presidents' Day recess. The 20-page unclassified chapter on the People's Republic of China traces illegal foreign contributions to the Democratic National Committee that were allegedly "facilitated by individuals with extensive ties to the PRC." tinental bombing missions without refueling. Designed in the 1970s as a nuclear bomb-dropper, the plane has been con- verted since then for conventional mis- sions and is being deployed to the Mideast for the first time in a potential combat role. Last September, a pilot's attempt to perform an uncommon but permissible maneuver led to a crash of a B-11B bomber that killed all four people aboard. The Air Force reported in December that the pilot of the S200 million plane was making a sharp right turn during a Sept. 19 training mission on the Montana prairie when the plane neared stall speed and crashed. The technique is uncommon, but not for- bidden. That crash was the sixth military air disaster in a seven-day period, and it prompted an unprecedented 24-hour grounding of military planes for safety training. However, at 1.37 crashes per 100,000 flying hours in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, the Air Force reported it had its fourth safest year ever. AROUND THE WORLD LAWSUIT Continued from Page 1A appealed, so he must take into account the legal merit of an intervention, not simply what the University or CIR wants. Rosa Abreu, an educational staff attorney for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund - another organization leading the coalition - said the University's and CIR's response motions will state their legal arguments but will not determine whether the coalition has a legal right to intervene. "We believe that we are entitled to this intervention as a right under the law," Abreu said. "Whether the University is supportive in our motion to intervene will not affect the court's legal analysis." Johnson said that after next week's deadline to respond, the coalition will have five days to file a response. Duggan may allow representatives from the coalition to speak before the court or simply file written arguments, she said. JOBS Continued from Page :A for business internships with Ameritech and AAA management. "There was a large variety of companies offering consulting and management positions, which is what I am interested in" Employers were equally excited about finding prospective employees. "There were many impressive, eager and ambitious students here today and we received a lot of high-quality candidates for positions to be filled," said Michelle Warren, a representative of Accountemps, a finance corporation located in Ann Arbor. "This has always been a very successful job fair." In addition to organizing job fairs, Lawson said CP&P offers students a wide range of career services, including assistance with writing resumes, applying to graduate school and obtaining jobs. "This is a big event, but it is certainly not the only thing we do," Lawson said. "We are available to students for any career-related issue" Northern Ireland peace tals adjourn DUBLIN, Ireland - After three days of filibuster and legal maneu- ver, stalled Northern Ireland peace talks adjourned in disarray here yesterday, with no decision on whether to expel Sinn Fein, politi- cal wing of the outlawed Irish Republican Army. Despite the unresolved - but uneven - battle between the British government, supported by Ireland, and Sinn Fein, George Mitchell, the American chair of the peace talks, told reporters he remains optimistic that a peaceful settlement for the divided British province is within reach. But there was only discord yester- day, as talks ended for the week without achieving intentions of Britain and Ireland to expel Sinn Fein temporarily because of two murders in Belfast last week attrib- uted to the IRA. Arguing there was no evidence on which to justify its exclusion, Sinn Fein asked an Irish court to issue an order forbidding it. That proceeding, too, adjourned without decision yesterday. Sinn Fein will continue arguing it court case today, but the talks do n resume until Monday, when they return to Belfast. 1998 labeled year of the refugee in Bosnia DRVAR, Bosnia-Herzegovina - Drvar, a town of 17,000 before the war and home to 8,000 today, is symbolic what is perhaps the thorniest probl facing NATO leaders preparing to extend their military mission: how to bring the refugees home, especially during an arson wave aimed at intimidating them.; The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees has declared 1998 the year of the refugee in Bosnia. The commission- er, Sadako Ogata, says she hopes 225,000 displaced people can return to their homes by year's end. The refug e issue, she says, must be a top priority military planners. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. i [ rI I. A t mm r. Xi:tjajn jji f 1, Turn a smart career decision into a brilliant one. Enter the technical arena with Northrop Grumman in Rolling Meadows, Illinois. Our Electronic Systems Integration division is a world- wide leader in smart electronic systems research, design, development and manufacture. As a member of the Northrop Grumman ESID-ES team, you will have a chance to make real contributions to leading edge projects, from day one. In other words, you will be given the opportunity, introduction and support for project specific responsibilities, such as leading edge Software Development, Digital Design, RF Systems, Integration and Test. You will also benefit from Northrop Grumman's commitment to personal growth and development. With a variety of projects both current and on the horizon, we're seeking top engineering grad- uates to join our team in Rolling Meadows. Here you will find a quality of life that is unsurpassed in its diversity. Only 35 minutes northwest of Chicago, this area incorporates all the best of both urban and suburban lifestyles. For face-to-face information about Northrop Grumman's out- standing and exciting opportunities, stop by and see us? On-Campus Recruiting ]FEBRUARY 20, 1998 Engineering Placement Office Sterns Building 8:30 am- 5:00 pm For more information and details, contact your Career Development Counselor. Begin your professional journey with a top-flight technology company-Northrop Grumman Electronic Systems. It may be one of the smartest moves you'll ever make. As a part of our team, yn will enioy a competitive salary and benefits oackaae which includes health/maior . 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 su 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 St., 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 Janet Adamy, Managing Editor EDITORS:Marla Hackett, Heather Kamins, Jeffrey Kosseff, Chris Metinko. STAFF: Melissa Andrzejak, Reilly Brennan, Jodi S. Cohen, Gerard Cohen-Vrignaud, Greg Cox, Rachel Edelman, Jeff Eldridge, Margene Eriksen, Megan Exley, Stephanie Hepburn, Debra Hirschfield, Erin Holmes, Steve Horwitz, Hong Lin, Pete Meyers, William Nash, Christine M. Paik, Lee Palmer, Katie Plona, Susan T. Port. Diba Rab, Anupama Reddy, Peter Romer-Friedman, Melanie Sampson, Nika Schulte, Carly Southworth. Mike Spahn, Sam Stavis, Jason Stoffer, Carissa Van Heest, Will Weissert, Heather Wiggin, Kristin Wright. Jennifer Yachnin. CALENDAR: Katie Plona. EDITORIAL Jack Schillaci, Edit ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Sarah Lockyer. STAFF: Lea Frost, Kaamran Hafeez, Eric Hochstadt. Scott Hunter, Jason Korb, Yuki Kuniyuki, Sarah Lemire, Erin Marsh, James Miller, Aaron Rich, Joshua Rich, Stephen Sarkozy.Megan Schimpf, Paul Serilla,.David Wallace, Josh White,.Matt Wimsatt. SPORTS Jim Rose, Managing Editor EDITORS: Chris Farah, Sharat Raju, Mark Snyder, Dan Stillman. STAFF: T J. Barka, Josh Borkin, Evan Braunstein. Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Dave DenHerder, Chris Duprey, Jordan Field, Mark Francescutti, Rick Freeman, John Friedberg, Alan Goldenbach, James Goldstein, Rick Harpster, Kim Hart, Josh Kleinbaum, Chad Kujala, Andy Latack, John Leroi, Fred Link, B.J. Luria, Pranay Reddy, Kevin Rosenfield, Danielle Rumore, Tracy Sandler, Nita Srivastava, Uma Subramanian, Jacob Wheeler. ARTS Bryan Lark, Kristin Long, Editors WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Emily Lambert, Elizabeth Lucas: Associate Editor: ChrisTkaczyk SUB-EDITORS: Brian Cohen (Music). Stephanie Love (Campus Arts), Joshua Pederson (Film). Jessica Eaton (Books), Stephanie Jo Klein (TV/New Medial. STAFF: Joanne Alnajjar, Amy Barber, Matthew Barrett, Colin Bartos, Caryn Burtt, Neal C. Carruth, Anitha Chalam, Gabe Fajuri, Chris Felax, Laura Flyer, Michael Galloway. Geordy Gantsoudes, Cait Hall, Marquina fliev. Anna Kovalszki, James Miller, Rob Mitchum, Kerri Murphy. Stephen Paruszkiewicz, Joshua Pederson, Jennifer Pet'inski, Ryan Posly, Aaron Rennie, Aaron Rich, Joshua Rich, Deveron Q. Sanders, Anders Smith-Lindall, Julia Shih, Gabriel Smith, Prashant Tamaskar, Ted Watts, Michael Zilberman, Curtis Zimmerman. PHOTO Margaret Myers, Warren Zinn, Editors STAFF: Louis Brown, Daniel Castle, Mallory S.E. Floyd, John Kraft, Kevin Krupitzer, Kelly McKinnel, Bryan McLellan, Emily Nathan, Sara Stillman, Paul Talanian ONLINE STAFF: Mark Francescutti. Marquina Iliev, Elizabeth Lucas, Adam Pollock, GRAPHICS STAFF: Alex Hogg, Michelle McCombs, Jordan Young. Chris Farah, Editor Jonathan Weitz, Editor t°