4>, WE i night: Mostly cloudy, low 'ound 27%. )morrow: Chance of snow, th around 38%. luckeyes a win away from] Wednesday One hundredfive years of editor/alfreedom November 22, 1995 Pasadena Michigan vs. Ohio State Pasadena Saturday, noon, Michigan Stadium ase for themselves New Year's TV: ABC. Mark Jones and Todd beating No. 3 Miami in the Blackledge are the Bowl. announcers. tate (7-0 Big Ten, 1-0 over- Radio: WJR 760 AM, head to the Rose Bowl, should WWJ 950 AM, WUOM 3I 4o. 18 Michigan (4-3, 11-0) 91.7 FM. in a noon game at Michigan Tickets: Sold out. (ESPN). But a victory against Series:.Michigan C Jan. 1 will not convince too leads 51*34-6 ters to boost Ohio State above Une: Ohio State by huskers, who are once again 9. ed this season and heading for Coverage: Pages 8 and 10 See BUCKEYES, Page 104 and 10 Newsday 5 V Scott Burton ily Sports Writer The similarities between this year's hio State football team and the unde- ated 1994 Penn State squad are eerie, id at the same time they are tragic. The Buckeyes, like the Nittany Li- is, feature an extraordinary bevy of lent at the skill positions. The Buck- es, like the Lions, dominated their ig Ten competition all season long. And sadly, the Buckeyes, like the ons, are likely hindered in their hopes for a national title by a bowl system that leaves the Big Ten champion in the dark. The unfortunate circumstances that prevented Penn State from attaining the top ranking last season is worthy of deliberation in the halls of Congress. The No. 2 Nittany Lions were obli- gated to attend the Rose Bowl against a unheralded Oregon team because of the Big Ten's official tie-in with the Pasa- dena game. Meanwhile, the No. 1 Ne- braska squad made a much more con- vincing c Day byf Orange B Ohio & all) will h it beat N Saturday Stadium{ 8-2-1 US many vol the Corn undefeat' ; , : - - ,< < ., - _ . - < } ° . " ih" i DAYTON, Ohio -After 21 days of marathon negotiations, the United States yesterday announced an agreement end- ing four years of war in the former Yugoslavia and called for deployment of a NATO force that would include up to 25,000 U.S. troops. "The people of Bosnia finally have a chance to turn from the horror of war to the promise of peace," President Clinton declared in a Rose Garden announce- ment of the accord. Clinton said the leaders of Bosnia, Croatia and Serbia have "made a seri- ous commitment to peace" and "we must help them to make it work." The accord divides Bosnia close to current cease-fire lines, with 5 1 percent going to the internationally recognized government and 49 percent to the Bosnian Serbs, whose two leaders have been indicted for genocide and crimes against humanity. Bosnian Serbs will have to abandon their control over parts of downtown Sarajevo, the capital, and the city will be united with the apparent exception of the Bosnian Serb "capital" of Pale, which is 10 miles away. But both sides will maintain their own armies. The accords propose to reduce the Bosnian Serbs' military su- periority through arms-control mea- sures. If that doesn't work, the Clinton administration has said it will train and equip the Bosnian government army to ensure a balance. Signature of the accord will lead to suspension of economic 'sanctions against Serbia, widely blamed for insti- gating the war, and to a lifting of the arms embargo against the Bosnian gov- ernment that crippled its ability to de- fend itself. The accord also calls for the return of refugees and displaced per- sons - some 2.2 million people - to their homes of origin, although it does not provide for enforcement or give guarantees for their safety. The U.N. Security Council was meet- ing last night to discuss the economic sanctions and the arms embargo. A vote on all the proposals could come as early as today, according to diplomats who spoke on condition of anonymity. The accords also require all states in the region to cooperate with The Hague War Crimes Tribunal, although the only means ofenforcement is economic sanc- tions that could block the participation of any state in international economic and political institutions. "We've reached a day many believed would never come," Secretary of State AP PHOTO r Hecker (left) and Ashie Littrell of Pennsylvania watch as turkeys - traditionally the main course - eat a Thanksgiving dinner at Green Acres Sanctuary. in the White House Rose Garden, President Clinton announces a peace, agreement between warring factions in- the Balkans. Related Stories Congress considers sending 20,000 peacekeepers to Bosnia. NATO prepares for the deployment of 60,000 troops in the region. Bosnia's map looks like it did in 1992, but people are now displaced. - Page 2. Warren Christopher said, opening the initialing ceremony at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base outside Dayton. "We got what we wanted: a comprehensive agreement." Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic was more somber as he explained an accord that is likely to arouse criticism at home. "This may not be a just peace, but it is more just than the continuation of the war," he said after initialing the accord. Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic suggested that no one had won the war, and that no one was re- sponsible for it. "Ina civil war like this one in Bosnia- Herzegovina, there are no winners, and there could be no winners," he said. "All are losers." He said all sides had made "painful concessions" but, with- out them, "peace would be impossible." But questions arose immediately about the intentions of the parties, start- ing with the Bosnian Serb leaders who failed to sign off on the documents or to appear at the final initialing ceremony. !' y Heather Miller aily Staff Reporter Airline flights are booked solid, eijer is low on turkeys and students re abandoning the city. Yes - it's hanksgiving weekend. Most students have plans to leave :ampus during the holiday break. LSA sophomore Radhika Puttagunta s traveling home for the weekend. "I'm ;oing home to Flint and writing a pa- rer," she said. "But hopefully I'll get ogether with some of my friends" who he said are coming back to Michigan rom out-of-state colleges. Some students are planning on trav- ling farther away. Tammy Dowd, an LSA junior, is ying to New Orleans. students prepare to see loved ones, cranberry sauce "We're bringing my brother a Thanksgiving dinner because he can't come home," she said. Carl Selman, supervisor for parking at Detroit Metro Airport, said the air- port becomes exceptionally busy this time of year. "According to the airlines, everything is booked," he said. Today is the biggest travel day, but "after Thursday, it will be busy for the next few days," he said. Students planning on staying in-state over the holiday can expect cold, snowy weather as snow showers are likely and highs are expected to be in the lower- to mid-30s. LSA senior William VanErp is trav- eling to Ubly in Michigan's Thumb on Thanksgiving to visit his grandma. "I could use a day off," he said. But Van Erp is planning to return to campus on Fri- day to "catch up on all my work." Shortly after Thanksgiving weekend - Dec. 11- finals week begins, so VanErp is not the only student planning to spend the break studying. Marc C istillo, an Engineeriilg sopno- more, also is planning on using the time off for schoolwork. He's visiting his fam- ily in Grand Rapids and plans to spend his time "mostly studying and sleeping." With all of the travel, many apart- ments and houses in the area are left vacant, which can lead to an increased chance of burglary. "There is some increase because of opportunity," said Sgt. Khurum Sheikh of the Ann Arbor Police Department. However, Sheikh said the police de- partment has extra patrols over the week- end and they pass homes they know are vacant. "We try to have high visibility. ... In the city of Ann Arbor, at least on Thanksgiving, it becomes somewhat of a ghost town," he said. POTABLE S Spirited student turns caffeine, seng into lucrative business y Laurie Mayk aily Staff Reporter "I can't believe I had to pay full price for this," the spirited SA senior complained, shaking his head at the bottle of right pink Love Potion 69 in his hand. Patrick Sarkissian is sed to selling, not buying, uniquely strong herbal sodas. With the ink barely dry on a contract that gives him xclusive distribution rights for Skeleteen sodas in the east- rn United States (about 30 states), this student will swap ooks for invoices when he graduates in April. For the past ear, he has been hauling both around campus. The extremely caffeinated sodas, however, were not arkissian's first commercial operation. "Mid-junior year my parents wanted to teach me the value f the dollar and cut me off financially," Sarkissian said. His parents' actions prompted Sarkissian to become prof- table, rather than penny-pinching. Pepper spray was the ecret to his early success. With $500 rent money, he called a distributor - and lied. arkissian "pretended to be a store" and purchased a large uantity of the spray. In front of the First of America bank on Nike defends its deals with schools By Jennifer Harvey Daily Staff Reporter Under its contract with universities across the nation - including the University of Michigan - Nike reaped $50 million last year for marketing apparel like the maize and blue, The Washington Post reported yesterday. Sources quoted in the Post said the shoe giant's financial muscle compromises athletic departments' autonomy and tempts athletes to leave school early - charges Nike is denying. Some of Nike's profits stem from the Michigan Athletic Department's contract to market University apparel in ex- change for $7.2 million in equipment, supplies and scholar- ship money for all 23 varsity teams over the next six years. Nike spokesman Erin Patton criticized the Post's coverage of Nike's collegiate athletic contracts. He said the report focused too much on Nike's profits and -not on what the programs are designed to accomplish. "We tend to keep the focus on the benefit to the universities, not to the company," Patton said. "What we give benefits universities and athletic departments. The benefits (to universi- ties) are negated in (coverage of) big money numbers." Patton said Nike is committed to teams and athletes. He said some sports programs that tend not to bring in large crowds might be cut withoutaNike's financial support. "We want to give back to all sports," he said. Patton also said Nike gives back to the communities where th nh-tc. rrrac rehatd H ai ik a istiue d ISA senior Patrick Sarkissian shows off the collection of Skeleteen herbal sodas which he will soon distribute throughout the eastern United States. ---x