The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 15, 1994 - 7 .Eurostar makes 1st commercial England-France 'Chunnel' trip Los Angeles Times LONDON - The Eurostar high-speed train com- pleted its first commercial journey through the tunnel under the English Channel on yesterday - a hitch-free trip to Paris in just under three hours and arriving three minutes early. Later, a similar train departed London's Waterloo Station to carry its fare-paying passengers through the Channel Tunnel - or "Chunnel" - and on to Brussels, * elgium. And the first train from Paris to London arrived at Waterloo yesterday The train morning - also on time. The new service will be entered the twice a day in both direc- Channel Tunnel tions at first, and gradually increase to several trips at 9:40 a.m. and daily between London and emerged in Parisand London andBrus- sels. *France 20 Aboard the first 794- minutes later. seat France-bound train, high-ranking officials breathed a collective sigh of relief as they debarked at Paris' Gare du Nord: The first official journey for ordinary passengers was not plagued with the stoppages that delayed earlier preview trips. There had been some concern that the train would be late when it lost five minutes navigating the congested South London commuter routes. But it made up the time on the high-speed section of track in France. The train, with engineers Robert Priston and Lionel Stevenson at the throttle, entered the Channel Tunnel at 9:40 a.m. and emerged in France 20 minutes later. Priston described the trip as the "ultimate train drivers' (engineer) job." Passenger John Harper from Cornwall, traveling with his family, led the applause as the train in France hit its maximum speed of 186 miles an hour near Lille. "Won- derful," he told reporters. "Better than expected." The long-delayed multibillion dollar project was one *of the engineering feats of contemporary times and per- mits passengers to ride non-stop in three hours from the center of London to central stations in Paris and Brussels. Separate shuttle trains also transport trucks under the Channel between terminals at Folkestone, England, and HA T in Jamaica, whey widespread flood Continued from page 3 At least two pe Cuba and 65,00 "Obviously we will do what we Cuba's official F can to help the Haitian government," agency reported. said Col. Barry Willey, a U.S. mili- The storm k tary spokesman. people in Port-a Thousands of U.S. soldiers ar- tian Press Ag rived in the Caribbean nation in Metropole said September to help restoreAristide's killed in the s elected government. Aristide, who Jacmel, and d was ousted in a 1991 coup, returned missing. Oct. 15. And radio s Two deaths also were reported said 20 peoplc Yeltsin tells Russian officers of need to work with GOP Los Angeles Times MOSCOW - President Boris N. Yeltsin warned his top military offic- ers yesterday to steel themselves for "a certain toughening" in U.S. for- eign and military policy toward Rus- sia in the wake of Republican mid- term election gains. In his first public reaction to the new conservative wave in U.S. poli- tics, Yeltsin also told a conference of Russian Army officers he had real- ized that "it's necessary to work out relations with the Republicans, to even out our relations with the U.S." Yeltsin enjoys a hearty friendship with President Clinton but has done little to cultivate support among the Republicans who will now dominate Congress. He told the hundreds of officers attending the annual military plan- ning meeting that he wanted to avoid a mistake like the old Kremlin made when it ignored the Republicans dur- ing the Carter presidency and paid the price when Ronald Reagan won the 1980 election. "Then the victory of the Republi- cans and lack of contacts with them led to an acceleration of the arms race and aggravation of relations between the superpowers," Yeltsin said, ac- cording to Russian reporters who were allowed to attend the conference. "This must not be permitted today." Russian analysts, who perceive Republicans as decidedly tougher to- ward Moscow, predict that U.S.-Rus- sian relations will inevitably begin to worsen now. "We should not exclude the emer- gence of some problems in Russian- American relations," said the re- spected Nezavisimaya Gazeta news- paper. "The Yeltsin-Clinton relation- ship may weaken significantly due to the pressure rendered on the presi- dents by both parliaments. Tradition- ally, the Republicans were cooler to Moscow than the Democrats." AP PHOTO The driver of the first Eurostar passenger train pulls out of the Gare du Nord in Paris en route to London. The high-speed train took 794 people through the 'Chunnel.' Calais, France; passenger cars can be taken by invitation only until further notice. Richard Edgley, managing director of Eurostar, said passenger response had been "'uniformly good," adding: "They have all told us how relaxing they found the journey and how much they were looking forward to using it again. We are confident it will become the most popular way to travel." Prices for the round-trip journey from London to Paris range from about $152 to about $312 in first-class. Some 20,000 advance bookings have already been made, offi- cials said. Among the first-day passengers was Richard Low, 66, a retired insurance broker, the great-grandson of William Low, who attempted to build the first tunnel under the Channel in 1882. His ambitious project was abandoned a mile out under the sea from Folkestone. Low brought along six members of his family. He recounted that when he wrote for tickets to Sir Alastair Morton, chairman of the operators, Euro Tunnel: "I told him the train was running 112 years late." News Analysis BosIa confict escalates as U.S. quits embargo Los Angeles Times ZAGREB, Croatia - In the three short days since the United States broke ranks with European allies and gave up enforcing a U.N. arms em- bargo against Bosnia-Herzegovina, the Balkan conflict has dramatically escalated and the peace process has all but collapsed. The abandonment of an embargo the U.S. government did not believe in may have been intended as a sym- bolic action to conform with an edict from the U.S. Congress. But that policy shift, combined with more openly expressed U.S. sym- pathies for the Bosnian and Croatian governments and recent battlefield successes by Bosnia's beleaguered Muslim-led army, has provided the backdraft to inflame the Balkan con- flict and widen the gap between Wash- ington and its European allies. At a meeting of European defense officials in the Dutch town of Noordwijk, concerned allies dis- patched NATO Secretary-General Willy Claes to Washington for emer- gency talks over the widening differ- ences within the alliance. France and Spain have warned they may have to pull out their Bosnia-based peacekeepers if more arms get through re the storm caused ding and mudslides. ople were killed in 0 were evacuated, Prensa Latina news 1. killed at least 40 u-Prince, the Hai- ency said. Radio 40 people were southeastern port ozens more were tation Signal FM e were killed in Leogane, about 40 miles west of Port-au-Prince. The main highway from Port-au- Prince to Jacmel was cut and trucks from the charity CARE, which feeds about 300,000 people, couldn't cross shaky bridges to reach its warehouse in Gonaives, north of the capital, aid officials said. U.S. Army meteorologists said more than 9 inches of rain fell in Port-au-Prince during the 24-hour period ending yesterday morning and 14 inches fell in Les Cayes on the southern peninsula. as a consequence of the U.S. decision to no longer take part in a naval blockade along the Adriatic Sea coast. Bosnian Serb rebels expressed their anger over the latest political and military setbacks by attacking the Sarajevo hotel housing the U.S. Em- bassy and blasting their way back into territory around the city of Bihac, scene of the first major battlefield victory scored by the Muslim-led Bosnian government in 32 months. Croatian Serbs have joined the assault now threatening to vanquish the surrounded Bihac pocket - a move that would unleash a refugee crisis of proportions yet unseen in four years of Balkan turmoil and re- kindle the war between Serbs and Croats that has been simmering be- neath a U.N.-imposed cease-fire. Fearful of a catastrophic influx of refugees from teetering Bihac, the Croatian government has been con- templating military recourse to quell Serbs in the breakaway Krajina area, and a renegade Muslim group has also been conscripted for the intensi- fying showdown over Bihac. "We're very worried the conflict in Bihac could spill over the borders and lead to something unpredictable," said aU.N. official. "Thiscould be the worst- case scenario for the whole region." The White House decision to cease enforcing what was already a leaky embargo has emboldened the Muslim- led Bosnian government in its new and occasionally successful "octopus strat- egy" of waging numerous niggling offensives on widely scattered Serb targets to tie down the heavily armed but demoralized rebel army. By abandoning the embargo and entering into limited defense pacts with Croatia and Bosnia at this crucial mo- The effects Results of the U.S. abandoning a U.N. arms embargo three days ago: K NATO Secretary-General Willy Claes dispatched to Washington for talks about differences within UN, alliance H France and Spain say they may pull out their peacekeeping forces if no embargo is in place * Bosnian Serb rebels attack Sarajevo hotel housing U.S. embassy and recapture unstable, city of Bihac M Croatian government con- templates military recourse to quell Serbs, fearful of an influx of refugees from Bihac. ment, the U.S. administration has also sent signals of support to the govern- ments struggling to contend with Serb occupation of their territory. But the green light perceived by Sarajevo leaders for recovering land in the same way they lost it - by force of arms - could backfire on the government troops, as seen in the Bihac region over the past 48 hours. Bosnian Serb forces have recap- tured virtually all of the territory around Bihac lost to the government offensive two weeks ago, said U.N. spokesman Thant Myint-U. Western diplomats in this Croatian capital also cite intelligence sources as indicating that as many as 5,000 Bosnian Muslims loyal to deposed warlord Fikret Abdic have been moved toward the Bihac front lines from a refugee camp in the no-man's land sandwiched between rebel Serbs and Croatian government forces. Those fighting-age men, some al- ready defeated by the Bosnian army when it quelled Abdic's revolt in August, join what the Zagreb govern- ment claims are at least 2,500 Serb paramilitary troops from Krajina al- ready fighting in neighboring Bosnia. Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic appealed to Croatian President Franjo Tudjman over the weekend to "take all necessary steps" to prevent the Krajina Serbs from attacking Bosnian territory. 4 TEACHER AIDE. Community Day Care and Preschool is looking for dependable in- teractive person to help in early childhood classroom from 7:30 a.m. to noon, Mon.-Fri. '@Background in Child psych. or Education preferred. Good salary. Call Beth or Trudi at 761-7101. THIRD WAVE is looking for a headwriter and layout editor! And creative writing, poetry and artwork always welcomed! Call 668-8737. TUTOR and mother's helper needed for 4th grade girl, 4 p.m.- 6 p.m. Some driving, $61 hr. Call Pat 998-7061, Dave 761-4100 ext. 2545, or 485-0471, evenings. WANT AN EASY JOB for $6.00/hr? Part- time. Call Joe or Josh 213-0322. K Y L P 0SIT1N The Michigan Daily is looking for help in producing the Classified Ad pages.You must be able to work 1 -1.5 hours per day (Monday- Friday between the hours of 12:30 - 3:00). Neatness and attention to detail is a must. No paste-up experience needed, but it is helpful. You will be working with a student run organization and gaining valuable work experience. Work Study available. Contact Susan at 764-0556 for more information. WORK STUDY pos. avail. immediately in Chem. Dept. Approx. 6 hrs./wk. Flex. sched. Salary neg. Call Lee 763-9681. t' . *** SPRING BREAK- Last year's #1 Travel Co. offers you trips to Nassau, Paradise Island Cancun, Jamaica, and more starting as low as $299. Free food, drinks, club passes in Call 663-6633 for information. **** SPRING BREAK '95- Jamaica, Cancun, Florida. Best deals around. Call now for more infodand to reserve your spot today. Call Erik/Todd at 913-4536. ATT ENT ION SPRING BREAKERS! Book now & save. Jamaica $439, Cancun/ Bahamas $399 Panama City/Daytona $99. Organize groups, earn cash, travel free! 1- 800/234-7007. BAHAMAS TRIP for 2, incl. cruise, enter- tainment and hotels. Call 994-4940 for more information. COZY WINTER HIDEAWAY. Romantic log cabins. $49-$69 nightly. Includes hot tub, XC trails, and mom. Traverse City area. 616/ 276-9502. FULL-SEASON Basketball tickets for sale. 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We Deliver! 761-6650. knp-manaI U.N. to keep Iraqi sanctions UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The Security Council refused yesterday to lift economic sanctions on Iraq, and U.S. officials attacked Iraqi claims of hardship by showing pictures of new palaces built by Saddam Hussein. One palace is three times the size of the White House, and other reports said Iraq is importing li- quor, fur coats and ice cream. Dip- lomats said it was the first evidence they had seen of such levels of spending by Iraq's rulers. The 15-nation council rejected Iraq's claim that it has met conditions to lift a crippling oil embargo and other sanctions imposed after its 1990 inva- sion of Kuwait, said U.S. Ambassador Madeleine Albright. The sanctions were extended after the 1991 Gulf War to force Iraq to help destroy its missiles and other weapons of mass destruction and to drop its claims to Kuwaiti territory. Iraq contends shortages caused by the sanctions are inflicting suffering and death. 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