I NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 14, 1998 - 5 Yugoslavia maps plan to solve crisis Israeli ambush clouds talks on eve of summit BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - Rushing to meet a deadline set by NATO, the government outlined its plan yesterday to comply with a deal to solve the Kosovo crisis while for- eign powers took the first steps to put 2,000 monitors in place to prevent cheating. Threatened by NATO airstrikes, Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic agreed Monday to with- draw special forces from Kosovo, begin peace negotiations with sepa- ratist ethnic Albanians and allow international observers into the trou- bled Serb province. But several agreements to put the deal into force are still to be final- ized, and it wasn't clear when ethnic Albanians who have fled Yugoslav security forces might begin to return to their villages. NATO officials said they hadn't called off the airstrikes yet, and that they could still bomb any time after Friday, the deadline for Milosevic's compliance. "We hope that this will mark a turning point ... but the truth is not in what I am saying here today. The truth is in compliance," U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke said after wrap- ping up week-long talks with the president. If honored, the commitments should end a seven-month crack- down against Kosovo Albanian militants in the southerrbian province that killed hundreds - most of them civilians - and left up to 300,000 displaced. In a rare televised address, the first since the 1995 Dayton agree- ments that ended the Bosnian war, Milosevic sought to portray the agreements as a victory, saying they "avert the danger of a military intervention against our country." "The agreements ... are entirely in accordance with the interests of our country," he added, citing "enormous pressures that we have been exposed to." Since the crackdown began Feb. 28, Milosevic has insisted the cri- sis was an internal matter in which foreign powers should play no role. The crackdown was aimed at the rebel Kosovo Liberation Army fighting to wrest Kosovo away from Serbia, the dominant republic of Yugoslavia. Holbrooke said the key to the accord was Milosevic's decision to allow a 2,000-member "verifica- tion mission" and to permit aerial verification by non-combat aircraft that could begin as soon as the end of the week. "They are not monitors, not observers," Holbrooke said. "They are compliance verifiers." Despite the rush to implement the Kosovo accord, officials admit- ted yesterday it could take weeks before the full complement of 2,000 international observers is on the ground to make sure Milosevic lives up to the agreement. The Vienna-based Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which is responsible for the ground component, lacks a large per- manent staff. It will have to turn to its 54 member states, including the United States, Russia, Canada and European Union countries, to pro- vide people with the proper training and skills for the job. In the Kosovo capital, Pristina, the political representative of the Kosovo Liberation Army, Adem Demaci, said he was disappointed that the verification forces in Kosovo would be unarmed. And in Geneva, Switzerland, other KLA representatives said nothing short of independence was acceptable. Milosevic must take four steps: withdraw special troops from Kosovo, sign an agreement on the verification mission, sign an agree- ment on airborne reconnaissance over Kosovo and hammer out a "framework agreement" by November outlining future talks with ethnic Albanians, The Serbian government hur- riedly outlined its plan yesterday for a political solution for the Kosovo crisis and announced local elections in the province for 1999. The "principles for a political solution with a time frame for their The Washington Post JERUSALEM - On the eve of a crucial Middle East peace summit near Washington, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu set a strikingly pessimistic tone yesterday, declaring "there is no chance of signing an agreement at this stage." His remark came hours after gun- men believed to be Palestinian mili- tants opened fire on a pair of young Israelis bathing in a forest spring near Jerusalem, killing one, wound- ing the other and darkening the already murky prospects for success at the Middle East peace summit beginning tomorrow at the Wye Plantation on Maryland's Eastern Shore. Although the number of Israelis killed in terrorist attacks in the past two years is the lowest in a decade, the midday shooting was the latest in a number of violent attacks on Israelis in recent weeks. Netanyahu said it had gravely damaged hopes that the U.S.- brokered talks could break a 19-month deadlock in Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. "Without fulfillment of all Palestinian security commitments, there will not be an agreement," he said in a prepared statement. "And, in light of this gloomy reality, there is no chance at this stage of signing an agreement." If Netanyahu's comment was meant to lower expectations for the talks, it probably worked, It may also have been intended to soothe hard-liners in Netanyahu's conservative coalition, whose apprehensions that Israel may swap more occupied West Bank land for what they regard as an empty Palestinian promise of peace have turned to something approaching political panic. Leading the charge against a peace deal has been Israel's National Religious Party, which buttresses the far-right wing of Netanyahu's fractious governing coalition. Members of the party have threatened bluntly to aban- don Netanyahu's coalition if he agrees to a troop pullback at the Maryland talks - a threat they may not be able to make good on, since Netanyahu could count on the backing of Labor Party opposition members to support a peace deal. Nonetheless, hard-line activists. including Jewish settlers in the West Bank, demonstrated tonight outside Netanyahu's residence in Jerusalem, warning the prime minister that a troop pullback that leaves Jewish set- tlements stranded in a sea of Palestinian-controlled territory would amount to a betrayal. "If there is a (troop withdrawal), the public and its leaders will receive a directive from us to topple you," Rabbi Avraham Shapira, a National Religious Party leader, reportedly told Netanyahu. In the wake of yesterday's shootings, Uzi Landau, chairman of parliament's foreign affairs and defense committee, called on Netanyahu to cancel his summit meeting with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. Landau, a hard- line member of Netanyahu's own Likud party, said Netanyahu's atten- dance "is providing a green light for future terrorist attacks." Netanyahu gave no indication he will not depart for the meeting, which the Israeli media is treating like a rerun of the 1978 Camp David talks between Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli leader Menachem Begin, which were mediated by President Carter. But he did stress Israel's critical need for security guarantees from the Palestinians, without which he said no deal could be reached. Under a U.S. proposal that Netanyahu and Arafat will discuss, Israeli troops would withdraw from a further 13 percent of the West Bank, which would give Palestinians full or partial control of about 40 percent of the tqr- ritory. AP PHOTO Richard Butler, United Nations chief arms inspector, arrives for a Security Council consultation with an unidentified, staff member at the U.N yesterday. fulfillment" envisage self-rule in Kosovo, establishment of local police, elections within nine months, amnesty and an interna- tional investigation of alleged war crimes and monitoring. Political negotiations with the ethnic Albanians also will continue in Kosovo, led by Christopher Hill, the U.S. ambassador to Macedonia. The ethnic Albanians, who form 90 percent of Kosovo's 2 million popula- tion, have insisted on independence rather than regaining the autonomy Milosevic stripped in 1989. International leaders stepped up efforts to resolve the crisis because of fears that thousands of homeless refugees would die if they could not return to their homes by the time winter sets in. For some Kosovo refugees it is too late. Besart Buqa died yesterday in Kosovo, only five weeks old, after spending the entire life of five miser- able weeks as a refugee, living under plastic sheets and make-up tents. His mother and father say they were too afraid of Serb forces to return home in Budakovo, 25 miles southwest of Pristina. The boy died of the cold and exposure, his parents said. Professors debate Internet essay grading The Washington Post It took Hugo Rousselin, a sophomore at New Mexico State University, about 20 minutes to tap out his first essay for his psycholinguistics class on the computer in his bedroom. It took less than 20 seconds to find out he had gotten a "B." Good, the accompanying comments read, but "you need to define the word superiority effect and what it does" So, minutes before class the next day, Rousselin ducked into the computer lab, called up his essay, and did just that. And - seconds later - found out he had raised his grade to an "A." Rousselin's essay was graded not by his professor, Peter Foltz, but by the computer program Foltz helped design. The technology represents one of the first major efforts in the country that employs computers to evaluate the content of a student's essay, rather than simply check its spelling, grammar or adherence to rules of style. "I think it's kind of creepy to think that a computer is starting to do what only we used to be able to do," Rousselin said. On the other hand, "you get immediate feedback. In my other psychology class, I wrote a five- page paper and I didn't get it back until two weeks later." The technology will be commercially available in a few months, and scores of educators - from elemen- tary schools to universities - have said they are eager to implement the Intelligent Essay Assessor in their classrooms. Even the venerable Educational Testing Service, which administers most of the nation's stan- dardized tests for college and graduate school admis- sions, hopes by the beginning of next year to be using a similar technology to judge the written essays sub- mitted by takers of at least one of its major exams. For an outfit that hires several thousand human beings each year to score written responses, computer- ized grading is an advance that can be implemented "economically and fairly," said Barbara Voltmer, who oversees the Oakland office. There's no question the technology is efficient. And developers claim it is also reliable. In several studies of the Intelligent Essay Assessor, when two people and the computer graded the same essays, the computer agreed with each grader as often as the graders agreed with each other. But the mounting interest in the technology has been matched by concern among some educators that, even if such programs can judge the quality of essays the quest for efficiency is coming at the cost of human involvement and could harm students. Foltz and his partner, Thomas Landauer, who teach- es at the University of Colorado in Boulder, say the ideal use of their technology is not necessarily to grade students' work but to give students feedback that might improve their writing in later drafts. "My goal is not to replace teachers. My goal is to have students do more writing," Foltz said. But he acknowledgesthere's nothing to stop slothful teachers, eager to unload a burden, from using the computer in place of human involvement. Landauer began work on the technology 10 years ago, when he was a researcher for Bell Communications, a telecommunications firm. In essence, the technology is propelled on the idea that, with enough data, a computer can learn to under- stand the use of language the same way people do. To understand how it works, consider the case of a college professor who wants to assess a couple of hun- dred students taking his Psychology 101 class. The professor feeds into the computer the Introduction to Psychology textbook. Once the computer has mathe- matically analyzed the book's language, Landauer said, it will comprehend the words in much the same way people do: What they mean, how they are used, how different concepts relate and what would be appropri- ate ways of describing them. To grade a specific assignment, the professor can do one of two things. He can feed the computer a "gold standard" essay and tell the computer that anything close to it receives the highest grade. Those that fall below that ideal rank according to how far off the mark they land. Alternatively, the professor can feed into the computer a set of about 20 essays that have been grad- ed, so that the computer knows what constitutes an A paper, a B paper and so on. Then the computer reads the students' submissions, one by one. For each essay, the computer looks at the combination of words used and assesses the content and meaning,-and compares it to what it has already seen. It then assigns a score, and reports how confident it is in that score. Because the program already has a "vocabulary" it learned from the textbook, Landauer said, it knows which words and phrases mean the same thing and can compare essays that don't use the same terms. In this way, it goes beyond less-sophisticated attempts of computerized grading systems, which only looked to words that matched exactly. If the computer sees the word "doctor" used with Aphersity of California at Santa Barbara physicist Waiter Kahn poses at his home estdrday. Kohn was awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry. Researchers from 5 universities win *Nobel Prizes Digging for hope The Washington Post Researchers at five American univer- sities won the Nobel Prizes in physics and chemistry yesterday for their inves- tigations of the behavior of matter at the very smallest scale. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the physics prize to Robert Laughlin of Stanford University, Horst Stormer of Columbia University and Daniel Tsui of Princeton University for their discovery that under certain circumstances, electrons act like weird "quasiparticles" with bonds among atoms form and change. The process is so difficult that Paul Dirac, one of the architects of quantum theory, observed in 1929 that they pro- duced "equations much too complicat- ed to be soluble." But Kohn and Pople, laboring inde- pendently on different aspects of the problem, invented ingenious computa- tional methods that now make it possi- ble to predict many aspects of reactions and molecular structures in pharmaceu- ticals, climate chemistry and astrono- my, among other fields. The work Indiana Senate candidate raises money via Web The Associated Press Internet surfers who log on to Evan Bayh's Website can now do more than read the Indiana Senate candidate's biog- raphy, see his commercials and learn about his stances on issues. They can also type in their credit card number and send him a contribution. Bayh, the state's former governor and a Democrat, has collected a grand total of $250 so far, but experts say the future for such sites is bright. A trend becoming more prevalent during this campaign cycle has several candi- dates actively seeking such online contributions. But while Internet fund raising has its pros and cons, most m mo f s e .:. 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