I WEy Weather Today: Sunny and windy. High 69. Low 45. Toorrow: Mostly cloudy. High 69. Low 49. f Iditan One hnNde ezght ye feditori6/1dfreedom% *ri Wednesday March 31, 1999 Vtat. I C Iu; ;. Ann Arm, R ; : NATO The Washington Post The United States and its NATO allies yesterday agreed on an expansion of the bombing campaign in Yugoslavia that would target the center of Belgrade following the failure of diplomatic efforts to end the gnflict and continuing reports of brutal ethnic cleans- irn the battered province of Kosovo. NATO ambassadors agreed in a marathon meeting in Brussels, Belgium, last night to broaden the list of targets in the air war by about 20 percent, including sites in Belgrade, the Yugoslav capital, and others cru- cial to the power base ofYugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, official sources said. Meanwhile, NATO planes took off from air bases in Italy for another night of strikes now focused on the infrastructure supporting Yugoslav military forces in K sovo. Wussian Prime MinisterYevgeny Primakov, a strong opponent of the bombing campaign, went to Belgrade yesterday in an effort to stop it but emerged with ill- defined proposals that President Clinton and German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder promptly rejected. expands After six hours of talks with Milosevic, Primakov said upon arriving in Bonn that the Serb leader was prepared to negotiate a political settlement and with- draw some troops from the separatist province, but only after the bombing stops. Schroeder called this offer "unacceptable" and Clinton used the same word in a brief statement. "President Milosevic began this brutal campaign," Clinton added. "It is his responsibility to bring it to an immediate end and embrace a just peace. There is a strong con- sensus in NATO that we must press forward with our military action," he said. As the war continues with unexpected brutality, officials said the Clinton administration is beginning to envisage a Kosovo that would be independent in all but name, protected by an international power - pos- sibly the United Nations, according to senior officials. The U.S. view is that the Serbs have forfeited their right to rule Kosovo by their actions in their offensive, and the Kosovars have been so radicalized that they will never agree to live under Serb rule. targets NATO's sense of urgency has increased as the tales of horror emerging from Kosovo have multiplied and neighboring countries have shown signs of staggering under the weight of half a million refugees, including 100,000 who have fled the province since the bomb- ing campaign began. Yesterday Macedonia began rejecting Kosovar Albanians without passports and a relief official said border police turned back a train that carried dozens of refugees because they lacked "proper documenta- tion." Despite Clinton's assertion of a "strong consensus" in NATO, it was clear yesterday that disagreements have surfaced within the alliance on tactics, if not on the overall wisdom and necessity of the bombing campaign. Senior administration officials have acknowledged that the scope and ferocity of the Serb crackdown in Kosovo took them by surprise. As special Kosovo representative James Pardew put it yesterday, "What is shocking is the size, scope and See KOSOVO, Page 7 AP PHOTO Xhafer Elezix of West Bloomfield, Mich., joins hundreds of other Albanians in a rally to support NATO military strikes in Yugoslavia outside the McNamara Federal Building in Detroit yesterday. Bill would pgahize low-stakes gambing Byy fely O'C mnwo Daily Staff Reporter tered a gambling pool sponsored b our favorite sports bar lately? Probably not, because commercial establishments and regular citizens are prohibited from unauthorized gambling in Michigan. But a new bill sponsored by Sen. David Jaye (R-Macomb) would end that restriction, allowing restaurants and bars to attract clientele and draw sports fanatics with dollar signs in their ey -s . Ay legislation says that couch pota- to gamblers shouldn't be criminals in the state of Michigan," Jaye said. Small-stakes gambling pools are "enjoyed for their entertainment value and not their payoff." Jaye's bill would legalize sports bet- ting pools with some restrictions. Bars sponsoring pools would not be able to charge an organizing fee or make any n ey off the pools. Participants w d be able to wager no more than $10 and the entire pot could be no larg- er than $1,000. * College athletes and employees of col- lege athletic programs are currently pro- hibited from betting on college sports and Jaye's bill would not change this. As the law stands now, bars and restaurants can lose their liquor license if any type of gambling takes place on their premises. This includes gambling p ^ s which are not affiliated with the . ut are brought onto the property by a customer. A private citizen found to be gam- bling illegally faces a misdemeanor charge of up to a year in prison and/or a $500 fine. This does not include the state lottery, gambling casinos or other forms of gambling that have been approved by the state Legislature. Jaye said his bill would take the out of a harmless activity that cold benefit business owners. The bill "would bring a degree of relief and peace of mind," Jaye said. But state Rep. Mark Schauer (D- Battle Creek) said the idea of loosening restrictions on gambling makes him a little nervous. "My initial reaction is that I would have concerns about it," Schauer said. See GAMBLING, Page 2 Take me out to the ballgame MSA discusses procedures for election revote By Jewel Gopwani Daily Staff Reporter The fraudulent votes cast during last week's Michigan Student Assembly elections didn't just postpone the results. They halted MSA dead in its tracks. Last night's meeting, originally scheduled to be the traditional "in and out" meeting during which old representatives turn over their seats to those who are newly-elected, was instead a more typical meeting, spent addressing con- cerns over funding and the phony ballots dis- covered last week. Addressing the assembly on the plan of action MSA's Elections Board had considered yesterday, Hillel's Governing Board Chair Micah Peltz said he thought the revote should not be scheduled to conflict with the Jewish holiday of Passover, which begins today at sundown and continues until sundown Saturday. During Passover, Peltz explained, those who strictly observe the holiday are advised to not perform any work-related tasks, which includes logging on to a computer to vote again. "It's pretty unacceptable," Peltz said. "I don't want (the revote) to conflict with the observance of any religious holiday." After Peltz expressed his grievance, Elections Director Andrew Serowik said the original time the revote was scheduled to begin - 12 a.m. today - was changed to 8 p.m. yesterday to accommo- date those observing Passover. Serowik continued to explain the situation sur- rounding the fraudulent votes and the Elections Board's plan of action and allowed assembly mem- bers to ask questions. Inquiring about the Department of Public Safety's investigation into the situation, MSA Vice President Sarah Chopp asked how the elections board would deal with DPS's report if the election results were already released. "I think MSA can deal with that," Serowik said: DANAIINNANE/Daily Nine-year-old Erik Olsen waits for the Michigan baseball team's first home game of the season to begin. The Wolverines defeated Central Michigan, 7-3. code drawFIFS. debate DARBY FRIEDLIS/Daily Micah Peltz, chair of the Hillel Governing Board, speaks at last night's Michigan Student Assembly meeting about conflicts between the MSA elections revote and Passover. Serowik said only the races affected by the fraudulent votes will require revotes, and the board will not reveal the names of the candidates involved in those particular races to the public or assembly members. With consent, the assembly voted to allot the elections board $500 to conduct the re-vote. Serowik said after the meeting that the revote would cost approximately $750, because he had negotiated a price amounting to half the usual $1,500 cost of the online vot- ing. The LSA Student Government elections, which were more affected by the fraudulent votes, will also ask students to revote. LSA-SG Elections Director Cagla Ozden said the students will request that students cast ballots in the representative race again, but not in the race for executive offices. See MSA, Page 2 By Michael Grass Daily Staff Reporter With the anti-sweatshop movement sparking the fire of campus activism across the nation, a White House-sponsored code of labor stan- dards for apparel manufacturers is taking a lot of heat. The Apparel Daily Indepth 1~lb in d us t y Industry Partnership and Fair Labor Association code - signed this month by 17 universities, including all those in the Ivy League, Duke University and others - was a White House initiative started two years ago. It currently is supported by numerous cor- porations, national labor and consumer orga- nizations. .But many national labor organizations like the National Labor Committee, American Federation of Labor, Congress of Industrial Organizations and Union of Needletrades, Industries and Textile Employees and the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility oppose the AIP-FLA. Numerous campus groups, like the University's Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality also oppose the code, calling it weak. See CODE, Page 7 4aily to assess affirmative action attitudes The Michigan Daily will conduct the first comprehensive survey of student opinions on affirmative action and admissions policies at the University. The survey, designed in conjunction with the Department of Communications Studies and the Institute for Social st n Research, will be a probability sample of 1,600 University students, selected at random from all cur- rently enrolled University students. Students selected to take the survey will receive an e-mail with the subject heading, "Michigan Daily Student Survey." To ensure all University students are represented, a high level of participation is required. If you receive an e-mail with this subject line, please respond as soon as possible. The survey takes about 15 minutes to complete. The results of the survey will be reported in a Student faces court hearing By Marta Brill Daily Staff Reporter LSA first-year student Aaron Bruns is scheduled to have his preliminary hearing today at 1 pm at the Washtenaw County Circuit Court for violating the Child Sexually Abusive Act - a felony in the state of Michigan. If convicted Bruns faces a max- imum sentence of seven years in jail and/or a $50,000 fine. Bruns, an Ohio resident, allegedly downloaded child pornography from the Internet on his computer from his South Quad Residence Hall room. An nttt-n eatP n .. P .fn .,m4ntna -+.. tml;na te ;lleet 'U' broadened hoizons in 19th Centuy: Female By Sarah Lewis Center for the Education of Women librarian Daily Staff Reporter Jeanne Miller said the black female population at the "No one would wish a college to be homogeneous University was small and "the society as a whole was in the wealth or race or social status of the families fairly segregated"-making information on minori- of its students," former Radcliffe College ties in the 19th Century hard to attain. President Ada Comstock wrote in "Women at Michigan," a new book 1927, according to Barbara Miller by Ruth Bordin detailing the histo- Solomon's book "In the Company / ry of women at the University, of Educated Women." -m $ states that the late 1800s ushered But Mary Henrietta Graham, in several more women of color. the first black woman believed ,- Sophia Bethena Jones, the to have been admitted to the first black woman to graduate University, did not gain tfrom the Medical School and entrance until nearly 60 years the only black woman in the after it was founded in 1817. P4art 3ofclass of 1885, started the first While many specifics are 3-part series nurse-training program at Spelman unknown, Information and Resource College and later became a resident Coordinator Elizabeth James said physician, James said. I I { Glraam-iwhose family emigateto -Michigan Bordin wrote that two Asian women also stud-