The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 12, 1993 - Page 3 I Israel's *cabinet cuts Arab work force JERUSALEM (AP) - Cabinet ministers endorsed Prime Minister *Yitzhak Rabin's plans yesterday to keep the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip sealed indefinitely and sharply cut the Palestinian work force in Israel. Rabin believes a separation of the two areas is vital to curb violence and win support among Israelis for future concessions in Middle East peace talks. The closure, imposed March 31 ufter a wave of Arab-Israeli attacks, bars 1.8 million Palestinians from entering Israel and dealt a harsh economic blow to both sides. The occupied territories were sealed during most of the Persian Gulf War, and have been shut periodically during times of unrest. Wages from 120,000 Palestinian laborers in Israel account for half the ncome of Gaza and one-third the ncome of the West Bank. Israeli employers, meanwhile, depend on Arabs to fills many low-level jobs. Yesterday, the Cabinet decided to review the closure weekly and inject more money into the territories to compensate for the lost jobs. In another development, aides to Rabin said he would meet lVednesday with President Hosni ubarak of Egypt in the Egyptian city of Ismailiya to try to work out problems hindering the resumption of peace talks, scheduled to restart April 20 in Washington. A key issue will be the participa- tion of Palestinians, who pulled out of the U.S.-sponsored talks after Israel deported about 400 alleged Muslim militants to south Lebanon *n December. 'On Saturday, Palestinian leader Faisal Husseini said an Israeli promise to return all deportees was no longer a condition to resume negotiations. The Palestinians have not, however, announced they were returning to the talks. Palestinian peace negotiators, addressing the closure of the erritories, complained Israel nilaterally decided issues that should be negotiated in the Washington talks on Palestinian autonomy. "Rabin is imposing his vision of the transitional period regardless of our views," Ghassan Khatib said. Israel's hawkish government opponents also oppose a long-term closure, saying it is the first step oward Palestinian independence. And two left-wing ministers voted against the Rabin plan in the Cabinet's special session yesterday. They said they back the idea of separation, but feel more aid should be given to the depressed Palestinian economy. Two white men killed in violence in South Africa Attackfollows murder of ANC oficial SHARON MUSHER/Dally Groovin' at Quadapalooza RC first-year student Seth Wenig (far left) and his partner RC sophomore Preeti Garg (left) dance at East Quad's first annual Quadapalooza concert. The all-day event featured local bands, music, and free food for residents. Advertisement lampoons former Clinton attrney general nominee JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - Two whites were burned to death by a Black crowd and a third had part of his tongue cut out despite appeals for calm yesterday, a day after the assassination of a popular African National Congress (ANC) official. The ANC, meanwhile, accused security officials of ignoring re- quests for special protection for the slain activist, Chris Hani. But the ANC said his killing would not derail negotiations with the government on ending apartheid. A white man was arrested in Hani's killing. ANC President Nelson Mandela and South African President F.W. de Klerk appealed for calm in televised addresses, but at least two attacks occurred yesterday. The ANC accused police of firing on a small memorial service for Hani in the Black township of Soweto near Johannesburg, killing one Black. Police Maj. Henriette-Bester denied it was a memorial service and said officers fired on a crowd after people began throwing stones and shooting at them. The three white men had driven into Lwandli Black township outside Cape Town to buy beer when their two vehicles were stoned and set afire by a crowd, police said. Police said two were killed and one injured. A fourth white man escaped. While mob attacks on whites are rare, police did not know whether the attack was in reprisal for Hani's assassination Saturday. At a news conference yesterday, the ANC said Hani's death should inspire political parties to work more fervently for a peaceful end to apartheid. There were fears the slaying could hurt negotiations between Black and white groups. The talks, which resumed this month, had col- lapsed in May amid political vio- lence. Police arrested a white man hours after Hani's killing and said yester- day that a pistol found in his car was the murder weapon. They could not confirm newspa- per reports the 40-year-old man, Januzu Wallus, had links to neo- Nazi groups and left Poland 10 years ago to escape Communism. No right-wing group has claimed links with Wallus, who is expected to ap- pear in court Tuesday. Hani, 50, was chief of South Africa's influential Communist Party and a member of the ANC's policy-making National Executive Committee. He spent several years directing the ANC's guerrilla war against the white government before its suspension in 1991 and escaped at least three assassination attempts since 1980. De Klerk said Hani's killing may have been aimed at sabotaging Black-white negotiations on power sharing. Marches outside Johannesburg and Cape Town to protest Hani's death drew a total of about 2,000 people and were peaceful. Protesters in the townships of Crossroads and Khayelitsha outside Cape Town set up roadblocks of burning tires and vehicles Saturday, and police said they were stoned when they tried to remove them Sunday. No injuries were reported. Witnesses say Hani was shot at close range by a man in a red car who followed him into his driveway. WASHINGTON (AP) - A new company has turned Zo8 Baird's name into a verb and is trying to cash in on her troubles at tax time. In ads warning "Don't be Zodd," the company - Nannies Plus of Silver Spring, Md. - offers tax-preparation help for those who should be paying taxes for their household workers. Not so surprising in the year when Baird's troubled nomination for attorney general drew attention to a tax law the Internal Revenue Service says millions of Americans routinely ignore. Baird withdrew her name from consideration for attorney general after admitting she didn't pay Social Security taxes for her maid and chauffeur, who weren't legal resi- dents. All over the country there are others like her who don't pay taxes for housekeepers, baby sitters and other domestic help, the IRS says. The law Baird broke - which dates back to 1950 - requires em- ployers to pay Social Security and Medicare taxes for any domestic employee who earns more than $50 a quarter. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 1.13 million people are employed in private homes. But only about 500,000 households file the required tax forms each quarter. That's only a fraction of the sev- eral million people the agency believes should be reporting. Under the law, an employer who pays a household worker more than $50 per quarter must pay 7.65 per- cent of the worker's wages in Social Security and Medicare taxes; the worker is liable for a matching amount. Holiday cease-fire in Srebrenica ignored limiting U.N. aid deliveries SARAJEVO, Bosnia- Herzegovina (AP) - Cathedral bells rang and candles of hope were lit, but Easter Sunday brought little respite in Bosnia's war as Serbs hindered U.N. aid deliveries and a truce in the east faltered. NATO airmen spent the holiday preparing to enforce a U.N.-imposed ban on military flights over Bosnia. The mission, beginning today, gives pilots authority to shoot at violators. Bosnian Serbs had offered a cease-fire around the Muslim enclave of Srebrenica, but advanced on the battered town before the truce took effect, U.N. officials said. As the cease-fire deadline passed Saturday, two mortar shells landed near U.N. aid trucks being unloaded and another five shells slammed into a valley just outside the town, said Cmdr. Barry Frewer, Sarajevo spokesperson for U.N. peacekeepers. No casualties were reported. Frewer said Srebrenica was relatively calm early yesterday, but stressed that U.N. military observers could not monitor outlying areas. More than 20 local and nation- wide truces have failed to end Bosnia's war, which has left at least 134,000 people dead or missing since majority Muslims and Croats voted to break away from Serb- dominated Yugoslavia last year. 'They have been very tight, belligerent and obstinate...' -- Cmdr. Barry Frewer Serbs are outraged at the discov- ery of ammunition aboard a U.N. aid convoy headed for a Muslim-held Sarajevo suburb, and by NATO plans to enforce the no-fly zone. Since the ammunition was discovered Thursday, Frewer said, Serbs had been increasingly hindering U.N. aid deliveries. On Saturday, they blocked a regular U.N. shuttle service for supplies and personnel between Sarajevo and logistics headquarters in Kiseljak to the west. "They have been very tight, belligerent and obstinate, making it very difficult for our operations," Frewer said. In Sarajevo, about 1,000 ethnic Croats gathered at dusk Saturday at the Sacred Heart Cathedral for Easter prayers. Cathedral bells rang and people lit candles as a symbol of hope and new life. Archbishop Vinko Poljic, spiritual leader of central Bosnia's 500,000 mainly Croat Roman Catholics, preached a homily titled: "Be not afraid." Gen. Phillipe Morillon of France last week failed to lead 150 Canadian peacekeepers past Serb lines into Srebrenica, to protect up to 60,000 desperate Muslims stranded there. On Saturday, Srebrenica defenders blocked the evacuation of 2,000 refugees on open U.N. trucks, saying several Muslims evacuated last week were injured when Serbs stoned their convoy. Commanders also have blocked at least two previous evacuations, saying an exodus weakened the town's defenses. Bosnia's Serbs want to annex eastern Bosnia to other Serb-held territories and Serbia proper to create a "Greater Serbia." They reject a U.N. peace plan partitioning Bosnia in 10 provinces because it places eastern Bosnia under Muslim control and would not let Serbs keep a vital supply corridor between conquered lands in Bosnia and Croatia. Momcilo Krajisnik, speaker of the Bosnian Serbs' self-styled parliament, said the breakaway Serbian states in Croatia and Bosnia were planning a joint assembly, the Belgrade daily Politika reported. Krajisnik said both self-declared states would retain their presidents but he suggested a joint government of "New Serbia" be formed. Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic on Saturday reasserted that Serbs have a "right" to unite conquered territories in a Greater Serbia. Student groups Q Chinese Christian Fellowship, meeting, Charles Lee, speaker, Mosher-Jordan, Muppy Lounge, 7:30 p.m. U EnvironmentalAction Coalition, meeting, School of Natural Re- sources, Room 1040,8 p.m. Q Indian American Students As- sociation, weekly board meet- ing, Michigan League, Room A, 7 p.m. U Michigan Student Assembly, meeting to discuss Diag policy, Michigan Union, 3rdFloor,7 p.m. Q Newman Catholic Student Fel- lowship, administration/Finance Committee, 6 p.m.; Bible Study, 7:30 p.m.; St. Mary Student Par- ish, 331 Thompson St. Q Rainforest Action Movement, meeting, Dana Building, Room 1046,7 p.m. U Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, practice, beginners welcome, CCRB, Martial ArtsRoom, 8:30- 9:30 p.m. ] Society for Creative Anachro- nism,medievalrecreationgroup, workshop, 7 p.m.; meeting, 8 p.m.; EECS Building, Room 1311. Music, Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Q Earth Week 1993, Pledge to Re- duce Waste, Michigan Union, ground floor foyer, 12-2 p.m.; Toxic AirPollution in Your Com- munity,lecture,MichiganUnion, Wolverine Room,3-4p.m.; Guest Lecturer and Movies: "Our Van- ishing Forest" and "Our Threat- ened Heritage," Dana Building, Room 1046,7 p.m. Q Friendship, Love and Sexual Harassment in the Workplace, 1993 Signe Carlson lecture, re- ception follows, Center for the Education of Women, 330 E.Lib- erty St., 3 p.m. U Habitat for Humanity, informa- tional meeting, Art and Architec- ture Building, Room 2216, 7-8 p.m. Q Neighborhoods, Families, and Adolescent Development, RCGD Seminar, Institute of So- cialResearch, Room 6050,4 p.m. Q Rediscovering Dame Ninette de Valois: Dancer, Choreographer and Founder of British BaIlte, Women's Studies Brown Bag Lunch Series, West Engineering Buillding, Women's Studies Lounge, Room 234,12 p.m. Room 3050,4 p.m. Q Women's Studies Lunch for Languishing, West Engineering Building, Women's Studies Lounge, Room 232D, 12-2 p.m. Student services Q The Adoptee Gathering, drop in todiscuss specific issues that con- cern adult adoptees, Catholic So- cial Services Building, 117 N. Division St., 6:30-8:30 p.m. U Consultation for Student Lead- ersand Student Organizations, speak with peer and professional consultants regarding leadership and organizational development, SODC, Michigan Union, Room 2202,8 a.m.-5 p.m. Q ECB Student Writing Center, Angell Hall, Computing Center, 7-11 p.m. Q Northwalk Nighttime Safety Walking Service, Bursley Hall, 763-9255,8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Q Peer Counseling, U-M Counsel- ing Services, 7 p.m.-8 a.m., call 764-8433 Q Psychology Undergraduate Peer Advising, sponsored by Depart- ANAbR &2 5TH AVE AT LIBERTY 761-9700 $ 9) 25DAILY SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM *3. 25) ALL DAY TUESDAY' exceptions STUDENT WITH ID. $3.50 THE CRYING GAME (R) HOWARD'S END (PG) GROUNDHOG DAY (PG) Present This Coupon When Pw'ohesing A Larpe Popcorn A Recive One EXPIRES: 4/31/93 STUDENT PARKING AT U-M: Limited Space Available for Fall Parking Services will again be able to provide a limited amount of parking for students this fall. Permits for the 1993-94 aca- demic year will be issued on a "first come, first serve" basis. The sale will occur the second c_.t - S C:AS " MU LTI COLOR SPE CIA LISTS " ARTIST ON STAFF " RUSH ORDERS " NEAR U OF M CAMPUS PROSPECT, ANN ARBOR 665-1771 1FF with this ad. a a :.. r I = I