q Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, February 22, 1989 I Plane crash lawsult begins DETROIT (AP) - A federal judge yesterday dismissed the U.S. government and two companies from lawsuits filed by relatives of the victims of the nation's second-worst air disaster. ,U.S. District Judge Julian Cook ruled that Texas Instruments Inc., National Car Rental System Ins., and the government couldn't be in- cluded in the legal complaints and ordered attorneys to speed up their reviews to ensure that a trial begins in July, Court Administrator John Mayer said. Dallas-based Texas instruments had been included as a third-party de- fendant after attorneys for Northwest Airlines charged that a component in the cockpit warning system of Northwest Flight 255 failed to warn crew members that the aircraft's wing flaps were improperly set. The jet crashed seconds after takeoff on Aug. 16, 1987 at Detroit Metropolitan Airport in Romulus, killing 156 people. Minneapolis-based National Car Rental later was included in lawsuits alleging that a utility pole erected in one of the company's airport parking lots contributed to the crash, Mayer said. Investigators of the disaster have said a tip of one of the plane's wings apparently struck the pole before it crashed. The government was included in litigation because it certified the pi- lot, crew and aircraft, Mayer said. Over 100 lawsuits have been filed by families of crash victims seeking settlements, Mayer said. I If no agreements concerning the arp made by the end of the week, Northwest must provide a list of all outstanding crash settlement claims by Feb. 28, he said IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports Senate to vote on Tower tomorrow r t r t I Associated Press Egyptian Prime Minister Dr. Atel Sedki greets Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze at the Prime Ministry in Cairo yesterday. The Soviet Foreign Minister is scheduled to see Israel's Foreign minister the morning and PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat later this evening. Soviets ask Israel to talk with PLO CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze, on the eve of separate talks with Israeli and PLO officials, said yesterday he would try to persuade Israel to negotiate with PLO chief Yasser Arafat. Shevardnadze's 10-day Middle East initiative faces its toughest test today when he meets Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Arens in an effort to sell Israel on his peace plan. "Peacemaking in the Middle East is a very difficult exercise. It is a painfully slow process, but we are both convinced that intensive efforts have to be made to move the process forward," Arens said. Egypt's Foreign Minister Esmat Abdel- Meguid, speaking to reporters after a meeting also indicated that preparatory moves might take a long time. "We will keep on discussing and talking and having a dialogue, even if the dialogue takes a long time," he said. Israel is adamantly opposed to talks with the PLO, which it views as a terrorist group. It also has serious reservations about the Soviet concept of an international conference including the PLO. "We are trying to persuade Israel" to enter negotiations with the PLO, Shevardnadze told reporters after meeting with Egyptian Prime Min- ister Anmed Sidol. Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir re- sponded negatively to the Soviet proposal of a U.N.-sponsored Middle East peace conference. "We don't believe the international conference can serve the cause of peace, but it was their (the Soviets') idea, so it is not surprising they should raise it," Shamir said. He did not, however, rule out further discus- sions, and Israeli officials have hinted some compromise might ultimately be possible to overcome Israel's fears that the conference would be biased against the Jewish state. Yasser Abed-Rabbo, head of the PLO's in- formation department and a member of the or- ganization's 15-member Executive Committee, said the Soviets should not renew relations unless Israel accepted an international conference. WASHINGTON - President Bush yesterday denounced allegations against Defense Secretary-designate John Tower as "vicious rumor" and declared they had been "gunned down" by a thorough FBI report. A com- mittee vote on the emhattled nominee is scheduled for tomorrow. Urging the Senate to move "forthrightly" on the nomination, Bush said at a news conference the report produced nothing to substantiate alle- gations of excessive drinking, philandering and financial improprieties. Members of the Senate Armed Services Committee scrutinized the re- port, which the White House forwarded to committee chair Sen. Sam Nunn (D-Ga.), and and ranking Republican John Warner (R-Va.) late Monday. Meanwhile, Rep. Mickey Edwards (R-Okla.), a prominent conserva- tive, said Tower should withdraw his nomination because he has lost the credibility needed to promote Bush's defense agenda. Jury hears opening of North trial WASHINGTON - Oliver North's criminal trial opened yesterday with the prosecutor calling him a liar who "places himself above the law" but North's lawyer defended him as a patriotic Marine who obeyed the or- ders of the nation's highest officials. North, now retired from the service, listened intently as prosecutor John Keker told the jury the defendant had lied time and again to his pres- ident and to Congress about the Iran-Contra affair. . Chief defense lawyer Brendan Sullivan countered that North, a former top National Security Council aide, worked in a secret world where "he always acted with the approval of his superiors... he acted always with the best interests of his country." Thus the two sides squared off for the oft-delayed first trial to come out of the Iran-Contra affair, a trial that may take as long as five months to complete. Prisoner shoots police officer DETROIT - A Detroit police officer was shot yesterday at his precinct with his own service revolver by a prisoner who then turned the gun on himself, officials said. Officer Frank Hutchins, a two and a half year veteran of the department, was taken to Mount Carmel Mercy Hospital in Detroit with a bullet wound to the elbow, police spokesperson Fred Zanaroff said. His alleged assailant, a Detroit man, was listed in temporarily serious condition at the same hospital with an abdominal wound, Zanaroff said. The suspect, whose identity was withheld, allegedly grabbed Hutchins' holstered gun yesterday as he was being released. The man had been arrested Monday night on an assault and battery complaint and held overnight but was being released because the victim refused to press charges, he said. Investigators hadn't decided late yesterday whether to charge the gunman, Zanaroff said. Bush pushes budget negotiations WASHINGTON - President Bush and his budget director yesterday prodded congressional leaders to join them in budget negotiations, but Democrats responded by chiding them for withholding their views on where spending cuts should be made. Talk of more talks was put on hold while, with Bush heading for Japan, Congress began budget hearings amid efforts to extract more de- tailed information from the White House. "We've got an administration here that wants to embrace the concept of a line-item veto but won't give us a line-item budget," said Sen. Jim Sasser (D-Tenn.) chair of the Senate Budget Committee. Lawmakers said they told the president that before negotiations could begin they needed more detail, especially on how he would pay for the new programs he wants for education, the environment, child care and other areas. I Health & Fitnessj Poliee Continued from Page 1 The students asked the officers to contact the police department or the University if they had any questions, but the officers ignored the request and told them to leave the area, Neal said. The two students said they are "seeking legal counsel" concerning the incident and have not ruled out future legal action. During the press conference, Clark and Neal said racially-moti- vated harassment occurs on a daily basis in areas besides Allen Park. "Little attention is given to these incidents when powerful institutions like the University of Michigan are not involved," Clark said. Angered students and faculty met with University administrators last Friday, and urged that Duderstadt write a letter to Richards asking for a formal response by him concerning the harassment, Clark said. United Coalition Against Racism spokesperson Barbara Ransby, a Rackham graduate student, said UCAR applauds Clark and Neal's "courage and determination" in bringing the incident to public attention. "Unfortunately, however, while some University administrators self- righteously condemn this act of racism 30 miles away, they remain quite reluctant to confront racism in their own institution and commu- nity," Ransby said. University Vice Provost for Mi- nority Affairs Charles Moody said, "If this University is going to be number one, like it likes to brag about, then it has to to be number one in social justice." r - The University of Michigan Department of Recreational Sports EXTRAS 'Entreprenerds' cash in on style NASHVILLE, Tenn. - From his Alfalfa-style cowlick to his toes well below his high-water pants, Hornby K. Fletcher is everything a nerd should be. But he wouldn't change a thing, not evep his plastic pocket protector or his tape-reinforced horn-rimmed glasses. "I'm just happy to be a nerd," whines Hornby. The "entreprenerd" should be - he had a paid engagement to crash a convention on Monday at the Opryland Hotel. Hornby is the creation of Mike MacDonald, who founded Rent-a-Nerd Inc. after being laid off as a computer programmer two years ago. McDonald-Hornby will be paid about $500, plus airfare, for showing up and acting goofy at the convention here for the National Association for Campus Activities. "C'mon," he insisted, "even the most macho guy breaks down around his wife or girlfriend and acts silly and insensitive. And that's a big part of being a nerd." The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: for fall and winter (2 semesters) $25.00 in-town and $35 out-of-town, for fall only $15.00 in-town and $20.00 out-of-town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Student News Service. 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Opinion Staff: David Austin, Bill Gladstone, Susan Harvey, Marc Klein, Daniel Kohn, David Levin, Karen Miller, Rebecca Novicd, Marcia Ochoa, Hiary Shadroui, Gus Teschke. Sports Staff: Steve Cohen, Andy Gottesman, David Hyman, Mark Katz, Jodi Leichtman, Eric Lemont, Taylor Lincoln, Jay Moses, Miachael Salinsky, John Samnick, Adam Schefter, Jeff Sheran, Doug Volan, Peter Zellen. Arts Staff: Greg Baise, Mary Beth Barber, Ian Campbell, Beth Colquitt, Sheala Durant, Brent Edwards, Greg Ferland, Michael Paul Fischer, Mice Fischer, Robert Flaggert, Forrest Green, Liam Flaherty, Margie Heinien, Brian Jarvinen, Alyssa Katz, Leah Lagios, D. Mara Lowenstein, Lisa Magnino, Kim Mc Ginnis, Kristin Palm, Jay Pinka, Ji Pisoni, Mike Rubin, Lauren Shapiro, Tony Siber, Chuck Skarsaune, Usha Tummala, Pam Warshay, Nabeel Zuberi. Photo Staff: Alexandra Brez, Jessica Greene, Jule Holman, Jose Juarez, Ellen Levy, Lindsay Morris, Liz Steketee, John Weise. I......" I.-k ww - rn QCr r 0 r n