2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 29, 1999 NATION/WORLD NATO expands targeting in Yugoslavia during 5th day ARMADA Continued from Page IA Cohen, speaking on TV talk shows yesterday, said the loss of the F-117A - one of the most sophisticated and secre- tive aircraft in the U.S. arsenal - would not affect NATO's air campaign against the Serbian government as the attacks widen to target Serb forces in Kosovo. "We are going to move into a wider array of targets including not only those dealing with command-and-control structures, ammunition dumps, but also start to go after the forces in the field as such;" Cohen said. At NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, British Air Commodore David Wilby told reporters, "We are now just beginning to transition" from focusing air attacks mainly in Yugoslavia's air defense network to targeting the Serb tanks and troops that are continuing to pound the Kosovar Albanians. The NATO airstrikes were launched last week after Serbs refused to enter into a peace agreement with the majority eth- nic Albanians in Kosovo, the largest Serb province. Serbia is the main republic in Yugoslavia. U.S. and NATO officials provided a few details of Saturday's air attacks, which included a further use of the Air Force's B-2 Spirit bomber, a stealth air- craft built with radar-evading technolo- gies that are a leap ahead of those employed by the smaller 1980s-vintage F-117A fighter-bomber. NATO officials said 66 allied aircraft attacked 17 major targets Saturday, including various elements of the Yugoslav air defense network as well as an airfield and an ammunition supply facility. There was no indication that any allied planes had hit Serb tanks or other armored vehicles, although U.S. and NATO officials said that would happen as part of the intensified second stage of the air campaign. "We're looking at an expanded set of targets," U.S. Army Gen. Wesley Clark said on NBC's "Meet the Press." As Supreme Allied Commander Europe, Clark is the top NATO military authority. He declined to answer when asked whether the main tank-killing aircraft, the A-10 Warthog, had been used. HOCKEY Continued from Page 1A With just over three minutes gone in overtime, Krog stole the puck from Michigan defenseman Dave Huntzicker behind the Michigan net. Krog quickly dished the puck to Haydar, who put the puck past Michigan goaltender Josh Blackburn. Krog "went behind the net and passed the puck out front,' Blackburn said. "It kind of hit my stick and it was lying around in the crease and he put it in." Haydar's goal was the only time that he got past Blackburn, but he harassed the Wolverines with his pure speed. Haydar got countless opportunities to score a goal, but was unable to until the overtime period. "I was get- ting a bit "Collegefhog game of mei Mic STOC KWELL Continued from Page 1A adopted a joint resolution declaring that the. high objects for which the University of Michigan was organized will never fully be attained until women are admitted to all its rights and privi- leges'" according to "A Dangerous Experiment." I But, it took three years for the University to allow women to attend the University. Stockwell upon hearing the regent's decision showed up in September to take the admissions examination. She was officially accepted into the University as a sophomore. Stockwell was "at the right place at the right time ... and willing to be part of the fight," Nidiffer said. achieved the right to receive a University education, the lives of many female University students were diffi- cult. "It was lonely," Nidiffer said, adding that "for decades guys wouldn't date women who went to college." College women were shunned at church and had difficulty finding hous- ing because they were considered strange and out-of-place, Nidiffer said. Some women were ridiculed in class by fellow students as well as professors. But what kept these women from giving up? "I call it a hunger," she said, suggest- ing that today's students should try "to imagine sitting in school ... and know- ing you're smart and knowing you wanted to do something interesting ... and (knowing) after eighth or ninth grade that's it, Nidiffer said. "They wanted it so badly." frustrated out there," Haydar said. "Blackburn is just a great goalie." Haydar wasn't the only Wildcat who was being stoned by Blackburn. In all, 33 out of 35 New Hampshire shots were turned away by Blackburn, as the freshman almost single-handedly allowed the Wolverines to escape with the victory. Only Haydar and Mike Souza, who opened the scoring with nine seconds remaining in the first peri- od, put the puck past Blackburn. "We had great goaltending from Josh Blackburn," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "His play kept us in the game." While New Hampshire's speed and forechecking ability kept the Wolverines on their heels, Michigan's top line helped contain the Wildcats. Senior center Bobby Hayes was espe- cially effective, helping contain Hobey Baker candidate Krog. "Krog is a fantastic player, but he didn't beat us," Michigan forward Sean Ritchlin said. "Bobby did a great job on him." Hayes beat Krog to the punch on the Wolverines' only goal. With 10 minutes left in regulation, Hayes won a faceoff from Krog in the New Hampshire end and fired a shot past Ty Conklin to account for Michigan's only tally. "I knew where he was going with the faceoff, so I chipped it off to the side," Hayes said. "I fired the puck and I think that I caught (Conklin) off-guard." The Wolverines and Denver sur- prised the crowd Friday night, playing a game that could simply be described as bizarre. The contest could be best summed up as two games rolled into one. In the first game, which lasted 28 minutes, the Pioneers ambushed the ckey is a Wolverines, going up 3-0. mentUM" The Denver tallies - reg- - Red Berenson istered by chigan hockey coach B j o r n Engstrom, Joe Ritson, and Paul Veres - coupled with a 17-2 shot discrepancy, made it look as if Michigan was going home early. But Berenson called a timeout, and the second game began. This game, which lasted more than 32 minutes, saw the Wolverines outshoot the Pioneers 22-1 and saw Michigan outscore Denver 5-0. "College hockey is a game of movientum,"Berenson said. "I told the team not to worry about the score and to just start playing Michigan hockey." Michigan hockey saw the Wolverines pick up two goals before the end of the second period on goals by Greg Crozier and Ritchlin. "Everyone seemed to be down, but Cro's goal seemed to excite everyone," Michigan center Mark Kosick said. The excitement carried on against the shell-shocked Pioneers in the final period, as Dave Huntzicker, Dale Rominski and Mike Comrie closed out the comeback. Experts hope to avoid computer virus PITTSBURGH - Computer experts hope a weekend of warnings will prevent workers returning to their office terminals today from spreading a new virus that launches documents into cyberspace and clogs e-mail servers. Several businesses and governments around the world have contacted Carnegie Mellon University's Computer Emergency Response Team for help with the virus, said CERT manager Katherine Fithen. She said they should consider it a potential secu- rity breach. CERT first learned of the virus Friday afternoon and its members worked through the night to analyze it, Fithen said. She said the full reach of the virus may become clear Monday when millions of people sit down at their computer terminals for the first time since Melissa emerged. "It's safe to say we're bracing our- selves," she said. Fithen declined to say if any govern- ment's security was breached. She also wouldn't name anyone affected. The Melissa virus spreads via infect- ed e-mail and attacks computers loaded with Microsoft's widely used Word 9 or Word 2000 programs, according to CERT. Rocket launched from Pacific Ocean LONG BEACH, Calif. - A rocket roared off a converted oil platform floating in the equatorial Pacific Saturday in the first test of an interna- tional venture's oceangoing satellit launch system. The Ukrainian- and Russian-built Zenit-3SL rocket carried a dummy satellite as it lifted off from the Odyssey, a self-propelled platform sta- tioned 1,400 miles south of Hawaii. Fueled by kerosene and liquid oxy- gen, the three-stage rocket ignited and engulfed the platform in a cloud of smoke, then rapidly hurdled toward space. 0 AROUND THE NATION - 5 arrested during 3 Mile Island protest MIDDLETOWN, Pa. - Five activists were arrested yesterday as they trespassed onto the Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station to mark the 20th anniver- sary of America's worst commercial nuclear accident. The five crossed over a set of railroad tracks onto the property of GPU Nuclear Corp. to close a pre-dawn rally and were arrested without incident. The vigil marked the moment about 4 a.m. on March 28, 1979, when a pump stopped operating in a non-nuclear part of the plant's Unit 2. Mechanical prob- lems and human error caused more than one-third of the reactor's uranium fuel to melt. The company and the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission said only insignif- icant amounts of radiation escaped the plant during the days following the acci- dent, but activists contend monitoring was inadequate and the actual amount is unknown. More than 100 people - veterans of the nuclear debate and newcomers - gath- ered in the rain outside the plant to light candles and speak out against continuing reliance on nuclear power. "Half the crowd here was not alive when TMI happened," said Eugene Stilp, veteran antilear activist with No Nukes Pennsylvania. "We're turning this over to a new generation." Although women had finally I Don:t Pa":c: JS~a th n .4................:..: .~nL~ .u::>#; POW WOW Continued from Page IA noise;' Schuyler said. A medicine man told the woman she should make and wear the dress to feel better. After the woman followed his advice, her health improved, giving the jingle dress a sec- ond name, the medicine dress. "It brings good spirits within your- self," Schuyler said. Schuyler said girls who choose the jingle dress style of dance sew 365 small metal cones to their dresses, one for each day of the year. "The whole family comes together to make the outfit," she said. Her regular competitive dance, the fancy shawl, represents a butterfly with the opening .................... ............ ........... I I hen Matthew Romashco decided he wanted to go to law school, he knew that he had what it would take to be a great lawyer And he had the grades to prove it. What Matt didn't expect was the disappointing score he received on the Law School Admission Test. and closing of the arms, Schuyler said, and requires a lot of energy and stami- na. Douglas Scholfield, who said the men's fancy war dance also is high- energy, has attended Pow Wows since he was an infant. His family, which is originally from Kansas, travels throughout the country to different Pow Wows every weekend. Unlike the cere- monial dances, Pow Wows "are more to have fun with," he said. "It's the biggest thing in my life," Scholfield said, although it can be demanding. He said he plans on contin- uing his family's tradition with his 2- year-old daughter. "The first week she was born she was at a Pow Wow," Scholfield said. RECYCLE THE DAILY. You Can Be Too! with a Quality Resume Resume Package1 $5.99 " 25 Copies (B/W) I 25 Sheets (Resume Paper) " 25 Resume Envelopes Expires 4/34/99 Anr, r nr Paraguay president resigns, ends turmoil ASUNCION, Paraguay - President Raul Cubas resigned yesterday, ending nearly a week of political turmoil that tested the South American nation's 10- year-old democracy. Cubas said he lamented the fighting in the streets that led to the start of his impeachment trial last week on charges of abuse of power. He also asked for the forgiveness of all Paraguayans who voted for him. Later, before a packed chamber of leg- islators at the congressional building, Senate leader Luis Gonzalez Macchi was sworn in as Paraguay's new president. "The Paraguayan people have tri- umphed," Gonzalez proclaimed, after donning the red, white and blue presi- dential sash. "The violence has ended and so has the fear and persecution," said Macchi, who had pushed for Cubas' ouster. "Let this be clear that impunity has ended." Afterward, one of the shooting vic- tims from last week's violence was car- ried over the heads of legislators amid resounding cheers. An hour before Gonzalez Macch was sworn in, Cubas announced he was stepping down. "I have just finished signing my resignation," he said. Statehood activists won't give up dream SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - When Puerto Ricans rejected a proposal last year to become the 51st U.S. state - the second statehood setback in six years it looked like the long fight would stop for many years to come. But Puerto Rico's "statehooders" are still in the ring. Through renewed lobbying, fundrais- ing and involvement in Vice President Al Gore's presidential campaign, the move- ment is raising the issue again. "It's obvious that Rossello is trying to convince the leadership of the Congress to hold another plebiscite," said Anibal Acevedo Vila, head of the rival Popular Democratic Party. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. AROUND THE WORLD 'x 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 subA 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. 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