The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 27, 1992- Page 7 Call-in * abortion vote flops, 938- call by David M. Powers Daily Staff Reporter Middle East peace talks resume amidst violence What was intended to be an op- portunity for thousands of people na-3 tionwide to voice their opinionsv about abortion turned into a turmoil- filled event, organizers said. About 56.4 percent opposedy abortion rights and 43.6 percentr voted in favor of them in The First National Referendum on Abortion, a national telephone call-in. But organizers said the results had little merit because only 938 people responded. Project Co-direc- tor Mary Galvin said the organiza- tion was hoping for more than 100,000 callers. w Galvin blamed the small turnout' on poor media exposure, opposition from political bodies associated with the issues, and the inability of many college students to dial 1-900 num- bers from their campus phones.Y Galvin also said she felt that for some political groups the argument has become more important than the actual issues. "Nobody wants to vote Stairs as chairsMOLLYST or, this. They just want to perpetuate t ~a a civil war.... Without facts anyone LSA sophomore Matt Denbar sits on the stairs taking notes durin can claim to be on the side of the "History of the Vietnam War" class. With midterms approaching, majority." previously empty seats are beginning to fill, forcing students to sit aisles in the Natural Science Auditorium. 10 Speaker: Icudn genderwith Sve hate X10 ence afts Eace iissues WASHINGTON (AP) - Syria's delegate to the Middle East peace talks accused Israel yesterday of ne- gotiating in bad faith, but his Israeli counterpart said three hours of discussions produced progress toward a joint statement. After a three-day recess, the talks resumed in an at- mosphere charged by the deaths of five Israeli soldiers in southern Lebanon and Israel's retaliation with at- tacks on suspected guerrilla bases in the region. Syrian delegation spokesperson Mowaffaq Allaf emerged from the discussion blaming Israeli occupa- tion policies for violence and saying there was "no real attempt" by the Israelis to ensure progress during yes- terday's talks. Ile said Israel either does not want progress at this time or the Israeli delegation has been instructed not to move forward. Not only was there no progress, "there might be some regression," Allaf said. Israeli delegateItamar Rabinovich differed sharply in his account of the meeting, expressing surprise on learning of Allaf's remarks. "We agreed on some points, we kept reservations on others," Rabinovich said. "And certainly we didn't have a sense of regression, but a sense of working se- riously towards a joint statement." He sought to dismiss the differing interpretations of the meeting with a joke: "We were not in the same movie." Arriving for the talks yesterday, Allaf said he was concerned about a statement by Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin that Israel does not plan to pull back fully from the Golan I leights. "If Israel is not considering withdrawal, that means in other words that Israel is not considering peace," Allaf said. "Peace without withdrawal is impossible, and it is a precondition for peace really for Israeli forces (to) withdraw from all occupied territories." "Israeli public opinion needs to be persuaded that our Arab negotiating partners are in it for real and with good intentions," Rabinovich said. "And this type of violence is not at all helpful." "The only responsible thing for such incidents is occupation itself," Allaf said. "End the occupation and then you have no similar incidents." He added that resistance to occupation "is justified by the international law, by the United Nations Char- ter, and by international legitimacy." In a separate set of talks, Palestinian delegates pre- sented Israel with a paper outlining procedures in 12 areas aimed at enhancing protection of the human rights of Palestinians in the occupied territories. The head of the Palestinian delegation, Ilaidar Ab- dul Shafi, told reporters the he wants guarantees against Israeli deportation of Palestinians, demolition of homes, destroying trees and sealing roads and homes, administrative detention. The head of the Israeli delegation, Elykim Ruben- stein, promised to give the Palestinian proposals care- ful attention. g his the t in the Tourists become targets of terrorists in Egyptian battle by Ken Dancyger Calling the prevention of hate crimes a top priority, Loretta Ross, director of the Center Democratic Renewal in Atlanta, said including gender under this label could hinder the country's battle against racism. Ross spoke to approximately 50 students at a forum last night as part of the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center's (SAPAC) Sexual Assault Awareness Week. Ross said if the government defi- nition of hate crime included gender, she believes there would be an in- crease in the number of centers for hate violence as well as an expan- sion of services at existing centers. However, placing more impor- tance on gender will give people an excuse to ignore issues of racism, Ross said. "You cannot have democracy in its true form if you tolerate racism. ... If gender is included in hate crimes, it will diminish (the issue of) racism and raise the gender is- sue," Ross said. "America always wants to ignore racism." "The issue of hate violence is an issue we have been hearing more and more about," said SAPAC Director Debi Cain. "For us to deal with the problem of sexual assault, both men and woman have to be in- volved. This speech will make ev- eryone aware." Ross, herself a rape survivor, de- scribed violence against woman as being "underscored by society" and criticized the government's inaction toward hate crimes. Ross said that the movement for sexual awareness does not have any ties to the civil rights movement. "The civil rights movement has not addressed any sexual tensions within its movement," Ross said. "(The movement) has become in- creasingly homophobic and anti- Semetic. We have to know how and why the civil rights movements have these problems." Ross, who describes herself as a "feminist fighting the KKK," con- tinued by speaking about her experi- ences combating white supremacist groups, including attending KKK rallies. "Its not necessarily their num- bers, but the ability they have to en- courage other people," she said. "Their impact on society has us worried at the center. "People who stand with sheets on their head in a cow pasture are just reflecting America's failure to edu- cate. ... The Klan is making a serious impact on society." ASSIUT, Egypt (AP) - For the first time, foreign tourists are finding themselves targets in the escalating battle between Egypt's secular gov- ernment and Muslim militants who want to create an Islamic state. Tourism this year became Egyp- t's No. 1 earner of foreign exchange, contributing $3 billion to the coun- try's economy. So doing damage to the tourist trade could be a potent weapon for the fundamentalists. "The attacks on tourists symbol- ize attacks against the security sys- tem and against the economy," said No'oman el-Dab'e, a law student who described himself as a moderate but appeared to have militant sympathies. "Tourists are immoral. They drink alcohol. Their men and women mix freely. We are against all that," said Sheik Mahmoud, a fundamen- talist preacher and a member of the Islamic Group - el-Gama'a el-Is- lamiya - a loose national organiza- tion of militants. "If they come here just to visit the historic spots, that's fine," said Sheikh Mahmoud, interviewed at his mosque near Assiut, 200 miles south of Cairo and a militant stronghold. "But they must behave themselves." Islamic Group members and sympathizers are believed to number about 150,000 to 200,000. About 10,000 of them are believed to en- gage in violence. During the summer, extremist vi- olence and police reaction to it left more than 70 militants, police and Coptic Christians dead. Now the ex- tremists vow to keep after the tourists until the government re- leases jailed fundamentalists and abandons what they say are brutal tactics against them. The trouble is concentrated in a 130-mile stretch of the Nile from el- Minya south to Sohag, about 250 miles south of Cairo. Both the U.S. State Department and the British Foreign Office warned their nationals to avoid the area. Last week, terrorists ambushed a tour van from a canefield at Dairut, north of Assiut. A vacationing British nurse died in the gunfire, the first foreign fatality. Over the weekend, a suspected extremist injured three Russian tourists, one seriously, as they pho- tographed a mosque in Port Said on Egypt's north coast. Most of the more than 200 cruise boats on the Nile ply the relatively safe route from Luxor to Aswan, 400 miles south of Cairo. Few cruise the el-Minya-Sohag corridor. Two long-distance boats have been fired on this month, with no serious injuries. The main north-south highway runs through the troubled area, and Gen. Abdel-Wahab el-Hilaly, Assi- ut's provincial security chief, said checkpoints along the busy Nileside route would be reinforced. He expressed doubt that every tour bus and boat can be given armed guards or accompanying se- curity vehicles, as government offi- cials have promised. Publicly, security officials play down the importance of the assaults on tourists and other acts of vio- lence. Privately, some police say the: extremists may be gaining the upper, hand. * Lawmakers: Banking crisis is not impending WASHINGTON (AP) - Plenty of troubled banks remain in danger of failing, but no banking crisis threatens to explode just after the election, senior regulators said yesterday. "A significant number of com- mercial banks remain troubled, and their assets are substantial. However, there should be no so-called 'December surprise,"' Federal Reserve Board Gov. John LaWare told a rare post-adjournment hearing of the Senate Banking Committee. Andrew Hove Jr., acting chair of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., predicted 100 to 120 banks with $37 billion in assets will fail this year and an additional 100 to 125 banks with $76 billion in assets will fail in 1993. But the $16 billion in reserves established by the agency, $6 billion a year in deposit insurance premium revenue and a $30 billion line of credit to taxpayer funds should be enough to pay for failures, he said. Hove said it was "simply not the case" that regulators are deliberately holding back on declaring failures before the election. The wide gap between the inter- est rates on deposits and on loans produced a record $15.7 billion in bank profits during the first half of this year. These profits have post- poned or avoided many of the fail- ures that the FDIC had predicted for this year, he said. New regulatory standards taking affCr, Tan. 10 ..ill not t-n. a n ia brink of healing itself. Some say it's on the brink of a major crisis," he said. But the ranking Republican on the panel, Sen. Jake Garn of Utah, and Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady issued statements rebuking Riegle for politicizing the issue. "Perhaps the senator finds it po- litically opportune to jump on the bandwagon of the fearmongers and doomsayers," Brady said. Garn said, "It is a mistake to frighten the public about the condi- tion of the banking system for politi- cal advantage." But Riegle was defended by pri- vate experts who appeared after the regulators and contradicted some of their testimony. "You deserve a world of credit," R. Dan Brumbaugh Jr., a San Francisco economist, told Riegle. He said data showing recently failed banks had spent a much longer time on the FDIC's troubled bank list than failed banks a decade ago may indicate that bank regulators, like the savings institution regulators before them, are delaying the closure of insolvent institutions. "Denial, understatement, and other forms of forbearance pervade the official handling of the prob- lem," he said. Boston College finance professor Edward Kane said lax accounting standards, which he compared to "the rigged scales dishonest butchers nown t nnrrharcre their clientc_" anrd 'I E IMIC I lIGAN IA IY GT'' 'THIE IFACT'S G IETI'I I DAI LY Call GET' TIIE FACTS 764-0552 GEH'I'IE DAILY for G E"IF' I I FACTS more GE lT I IE DAILY G ET TIlIE FACTS N E WS eSPORTS * ARTS OPINION & PHOTO