14A -The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 28, 1996 NATION/WORLD Arabs call for end to Israel crackdown Los Angeles Times AMMAN, Jordan-Across the Arab world, anger is replacingthe initial sym- pathy for Israel after the wave of sui- cide bombings last month. Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres' tough crackdown in response to the bombings, closure of the West Bank, demolition of Palestinian houses and arrests of hundreds of people associ- ated with political groups that spon- sored the bombers, appears to be erod- ing the fragile good will that existed toward Israel and threatening the peace process. As a follow-up meeting to the "Sum- mit of the Peacemakers" gets under way today in Washington, Arab coun- tries are demanding that the agenda be broadened to bring an early end to what they call the "collective punishment" of all Palestinians for the crimes of a few. "What Israel is doing every day is humiliating the Arabs - both the Pal- estinians who are our neighbors and the whole Arab world," said Jordanian writer Mounes Razazz. "They deal with people as if they information about terrorist groups and have been defeated, and in this case they cannot make peace." Rising Arab outrage at the month- long blockade of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, which Yasser Arafat's Pal- estinian Authority says has thrown 60,000 people out of work and cost the cutting offthe secret pipelines ofmoney to them. But Egypt, the co-sponsor of the Sharm el-Sheikh summit, is joined by the Palestinian Authority, most Arab states and France in trying to broaden the agenda. They say the current Is- already impover- ished territories $6 million a day in lost wages and trade, is behind a sharp diplomatic row over the two- day Washington conference. -The meeting was called to come up with specific ways to fulfill the What Israel is doing every day is humiliating the Arabs - Mounes Razazz Jordanian writer raeli actions against Palestin- ians should also be addressed, be- cause they run counter to the original summit's other main goal, reviving the Arab- Israeli peace pro- cess after the bombings. "We cannot accept the needed to safeguard its territory and deter would-be terrorists after the se- ries of four suicide bombings between Feb. 24 and March 4 that killed 58 victims and four attackers. Now beginning a tight election cam- paign against the right-wing Likud, Peres' Labor government shows no in- clination to relax its stance before the May 29 voting. In a new blow to the Palestinians, Israeli Foreign Minister Ehud Barak announced yesterday that Israel will not withdraw as scheduled today from Hebron, the last West Bank city it occupies. In addition, talks on a per- manent peace agreement, set to begin in May, might also be delayed, he said. From the Arab perspective, the Is- raeli response to the bombings has been wrong from the beginning, because it strikes out indiscriminately at all Pales- tinians, including those loyal to Arafat and opposed to violent extremists of Hamas and other militant Islamic groups. goals of the March 13 anti-terrorism summit held in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt. The Clinton administration wanted the conference to focus on coordinated steps to oppose international terrorism, including such things as exchanging Palestinian people being starved and their homes being demolished," said Egyptian Foreign Minister Amr Moussa. Israel, supported by the United States, argues that its tough moves have been LET YOUR VOTE MAKE A REAL DIFFERENCE TODAY. Jonathan James AP PHOTO President Clinton gestures as he addresses the National Education Summit in Palisades, N.Y. At his right is Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson. Governors pledge to set more rigorous goals for students 0 & & Olga Sara I I 4 9 I I 9 I h F I f FL L The Washington Post PALISADES, N.Y. - The nation's governors pledged yesterday to revive the campaign for higher academic stan- dards by setting more rigorous goals for theirown students in the nexttwo years. The governors said that attempts to create new, voluntary national guide- lines for schools, launched at their last national summit on education seven years ago, have been greeted with great suspicion locally. fyo The only politically viable way to bring higher academic standards to the learning nation's classrooms, they said, is to keep mean 8 the federal govern- ment's role abso- _ lutely minimal. President Clinton conceded as much when he addressed the governors yes- terday, but he urged them nevertheless to set standards that are consistent from state to state. "While I believe they should be set by the states and the testingmechanisms should be approved by the states, we shouldn't kid our- selves," the president said. "Being pro- moted ought to mean more or less the same thing in Pasadena, Calif., that it does here. In a global society, it ought to mean more or less the same thing." The president also challenged the governors also to require students to pass tough new exams, especially in subjects like reading, before allowing them to move on from elementary, middle and high school. "If you want the standards move- ment to work, first you have to do the hard work in deciding what it is you expect children to learn," said Clinton, who, as the governor of Arkansas, mI Pi played a central role at the last educa- tion summit in Charlottesville, Va., in 1989. "But then you have to have a assessment system that says no more social promotions, no more free passes. If you want people to learn, learning has to mean something." But the governors went to great lengths during the summit to mini- mize the role of Clinton, Education Secretary Ri- chard Riley r want and the rest of federal gov- olearn,ernmentiO has pingthem set new stan- dards for stu- methingE dents. Unlike the last sum- 'resident Clinton mit, they also avoided any mention of national educational goals or standards. Yet the governors are vowing t create a new nationwide clearinghous for states to share information on how to set and assess standards and to try to create more consistency in what schools expect of students. In many states, setting high academic standards, and holding schoolsaccount- able tothem, is proving tobe adifficult, and often controversial, task. Even the general statement that the governors drafted forhavingbetterstan- dards ignited political bickering her Some conservative governors, includ- ingGeorge Allen (R-Va.), vowednotto back it until all references to "national" academic goals or standards were ed- ited out. That angered other governors. Roy Romer (D-Colo.) called Allen "paranoid", but in the end they agreed unanimously to support the summit's goals. For MSA * Reforming the Student Group Funding Process * Real Tuition Reform: Capping Tuition and a Tuition Tax Credit " Protecting your Housing Rights - Saving undergraduate Education by supporting the GEO e Focusing administrative attention to minority retention and services " Improving access to North Campus by Creating additional parking spaces for commuting students For LSA-SG " Preventing LSA-SG from becoming another MSA. " Increasing student awareness of LSA-SG through surveys, petitions, and newsletters. * Involving students and student organizations in government programming and academic issues. " Working on expanding the number of available R&E classes. * Making fund allocations easier with on-line applications and a computer database of past fund allocations. Germany may get toger on n polc A new vision for a new student government Los AngelesTimes BERLIN - After years of keeping communication lines open to Iran, much to the annoyance of the United States, there are signs that Germany may be reappraising its policy of "critical dia- logue" with the Iranian government. Until now, Bonn has claimed that by pursuing talks with Tehran's Shiite fun- damentalists, Germany was keeping alive a special, neutral relationship that could be used to help persuade the Ira- nians to abandon their support for inter- national terrorism. Bonn argued that its approach, also embraced by the Euro- pean Union, would, in the end, be more productive than America's policy of isolating Iran. But criticism is mounting, within Germany and outside, that Bonn's cor- diality toward Tehran is really moti- vated by a desire to help German com- top spymaster. The warrant charges Falahian, Iran's ministerforintelligence and security, with four counts of mur- der and attempted murder in the gang- land-style deaths ofthree exiled Kurdis leaders in a Berlin restaurant, the Mykonos, in 1992. The Kurds' transla- tor also was fatally shot in the attack; another man was injured. In 1993, one Iranian and four Leba- nese were arrested and charged with the murders. They are now standing trial in Berlin. But almost from the beginning, there were also hints that the hit was orchestrated by Tehran. Though Ira. denies any involvement, German opin- ion makers have been calling since 1993 for federal prosecutors to go after the suspected Iranian mastermind, not just the triggermen. The attorney general's office says it will not comment on the latest develop- t TC"%T7 EO