- The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 18, 1990 - Page 7 *7 1 Europeans weigh possible air embargo, expel Iraqi attaches by the Associated Press International pressure on Saddam Hussein intensified yesterday as Eu- ropean nations retaliated for raids on diplomatic premises in occupied Kuwait, and support appeared to grow for the idea of an air embargo against Iraq. In Brussels, Belgium, European Community (EC) nations announced they would expel Iraqi military at- taches and restrict travel by other embassypersonnel to protest break- ins by Iraqi troops at diplomatic premises in occupied Kuwait last week. The Iraqi raids on Dutch, French, Belgian, and Canadian embassies or diplomatic residences in Kuwait were unanimously condemned Sunday by the U.N. Security Council. Additional expultions were an- nounced by member nations includ- ing Britain, which said it was deport- ing six diplomats and 23 Iraqi na- tionals deemed a danger to national security. France and Italy had already announced such steps over the week- end. The EC ministers were also weighing a possible air blockade of Iraq to enforce the U.N. trade em- bargo against Iraq. Oil prices jumped yesterday, pointing to pessimism about prospects for a settlement of the six and a half-week old Persian Gulf standoff. Oil futures soared to record levels, above $33 a barrel, on the New York Mercantile Exchange. In a sign of Iraq's growing isola- tion, the Soviet Union, Baghdad's longtime patron, said yesterday it would re-establish diplomatic ties with Saudi Arabia. The Saudis infu- riated Iraq by agreeing to become the main staging ground for the deploy- ment of a huge U.S.-led multina- tional force after the August 2, Iraqi takeover of Kuwait. Arab radical groups, meanwhile, ended a three-day conference in Am- man, Jordan, yesterday with calls for suicide attacks against the U.S. forces. Ibrahim Al-Kharraz, a mem- ber of the Libyan Peoples Congress, pointed to the 1983 suicide attack on the Marine barracks in Beirut that killed 241 servicemen. In Iraq, there was an outburst of anti-American sentiment in the state- run newspapers yesterday, a day after Iraqi television aired an eight-minute message from President Bush to the people of Iraq. "Shut Up, Mr. Bush," one headline said. Bush's videotaped message, in which he warned that Saddam was leading Iraq into war, was followed immediately by an Iraqi commentary blasting the speech as "full of lies and contradictions." Hundreds of demonstrators then took to the streets of Baghdad, chanting "Death to Bush!" and "Death to America!" i a 1 e Walesa says he will run for president WARSAW, Poland (AP) - "For me, it is a fulfillment of the Walesa, a shipyard electrician for president and is identified with Solidarity leader Lech Walesa said pledge I made in August 1980," he who was awarded the Nobel Peace workers and the Solidarity union in yesterday he will run for president of said, when he catapulted to world- Prize in 1983, has split with Prime Gdansk. The other, known by the Poland, a job now held by the gen- wide fame by leading strikes that Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki, the acronym ROAD, backs Mazowiecki, eral who once imprisoned him and helped create the East bloc's first in- former close adviser he picked to be and is associated with intellectuals -2-Alt t., nr fal ic lnh. nn-dencnnt trade union.the East bloc's first non-communist and the government in Warsaw. KRISSY GOODMAN/Daily sougnt to crusn nis mbor union un- der martial law. Walesa said he hoped to speed the nation's transition from communism to democracy. "Today I made up my mind. I am putting forward for society's ap- proval my readiness to be a candidate for the post of president of the Pol- ish Republic in popular elections," Walesa said in a statement delivered from his desk at Solidarity headquar- ters in Gdansk. Post-Communist Poland's first fully democratic presidential and par- liament elections are expected as early as this fall and no later than spring. Walesa has hinted at his presiden- tial intentions for nearly a year, say- ing he needs to take the post to spur political and economic reforms. In June he said: "I do not want to be president. I will have to be presi- dent." government leader. Walesa charges that too many supporters of the old regime remain in key government and state industry posts and that the Mazowiecki government is losing touch with Poles' problems. Two camps - the beginning of a multiparty system after four decades of Communist control - have de- veloped from the political feud. One, the Center Alliance, supports Walesa Mazowiecki, who points to the initial successes of his shock eco- nomic reform plan and a host of other changes, has not announced whether he will run for president. Walesa has overwhelming recog- nition in Poland as the leader of the battle that toppled the Communist regime and sparked Eastern Europe's democratic revolution. ,What's coking? Bob Heald pours roasted nuts into a mixing bowl at the Wildflower Bakery. The Wildflower is a non-profit organization where anyone can volunteer. An hour-and-a-half of work earns a free loaf of bread and a discount for a month. ,Tanker reignites despite efforts to ,put out flames Need the hot news fast? Find it in the Daily. Become a Daily Photographer! BAY CITY, Mich. (AP) - A gasoline tanker that exploded and burned for more than a day somehow caught fire again yesterday several hours after authorities thought they had doused the flames. "It just took off again. We don't know to what extent, but we're just getting to the scene now," said Bay City Police Officer Thomas Toth. "We've got some boats under , way. It was reflashed, reignited," said Patrick Higgins, a petty officer first class with the U.S. Coast Guard's Detroit office. He couldn't immediately detail how fierce the renewed flames were. q Coast Guard ship The Bramble and Coots of Houston, a tanker-fire specialist hired by the vessel's owner, doused the flaming M.V. -'Jupiter tanker with water and white -chemical foam about 1:30 p.m. .: ryesterday. Within 30 minutes, the black smoke that hung over Bay City for 29 hours, disappeared and a blue sky returned. Officials continued for hours to put out small flames. When the flames lowered, clean- up 'crews used sponge-like material CLASSIF to prevent gasoline from seeping into the water, said Clay Evans, spokesman of the Spill Control As- sociation of America, a national or- ganization based in Detroit. A small amount of gasoline had leaked into the river, he said. The tanker -. owned by Cleve- land Tankers Inc., a subsidiary of Ashland Oil Inc. of Ashland, Ken- tucky - unloaded unleaded gasoline it had picked up in Sarnia, Ontario, into storage tanks at Bay City's To- tal Refinery Dock Facility when it exploded at 8:45 a.m. Sunday. Of the 18 crew members, 17 were treated at the Bay Medical Center and one was missing and presumed dead, Coast Guard officials said. The ship was moored at a pier jutting out on the river. It had pumped about 30,000 barrels of its 54,000-barrel cargo into a white pipeline leading to the storage tanks ashore when the blast occurred, said Ashland spokesperson Dan Lacy. Dave Usher, president of Marine Pollution Control in Detroit, said yesterday from the control base at the river that a few thousand feet of absorbent pads and booms about 10 inches thick were at the site. 'IED ADS Professional Improvement Program Minority students from all majors translate accomplishments, abilities, and attributes into career options for the future. Guest Speakers Career Decisions Resume Writing Interviewing Job Search Applications due by Tuesday, September 25 Show us your photos. B&W darkroom experience necessary. Come to the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, September 19, 1990 Call Jose at 764-0552 or 747-2813 for ques- C ^ s .. r ANNOUNCEMENTS I- W : =ati Leadership Seminar fr o Led by Andy Mozenter: -President of People Tech, -Leadership Specialist -Corporate Trainer Sat. 10/6, 9a.m.-4p.m. REgQSTGR NOW! H u l SODC 2202 063-000) $1& Fet tions/problems. 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