'VL-- r%-!@-. &A---J-- oft^ A^Aft^ -VA I NATON/IORLD The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 30, 199 -A Israel bans Arab travel in West Bank The Washington Post BET EL, West Bank - Israel staged a growing show of force yesterday in the West Bank, deploying tanks and troops and imposing a strict ban on Arab travel between cities and towns that substantially shut down Palestinian civil life. The broad reassertion of military control in the occupied territory - dubbed Operation Field of Thorns - came amid warnings by senior Israeli offi- cials that the Jewish state is prepared to send its army back into Palestinian-ruled city centers and disarm the 30,000 Palestinian police if there is any repetition of last week's shooting at Israeli forces. Palestinians replied that such a move would mean the final collapse of a three-year effort at negotiated reconciliation. As Palestinian grievances took center stage at the United Nations and in the agenda of a White House summit meeting scheduled for later this week, Israeli. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sought to back up his vow to prevent Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat from reaping "any political achievements through vio- lence" and ordered the reopening of a tunnel adjacent. to Muslim holy shrines. r. The completion on Tuesday of an exit from the tun- 0P PHOTOnel, which traces a path underneath the hill known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Arabs as Haram Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip that claimed 70 lives. Yesterday, tour groups, including some Americans, walked through the tunnel as a heavy police presence stood guard at both ends. The reopening spurred angry reaction from Palestinians, and riot police chased bottle-throwing youths through the narrow stone streets of Jenisalern's Old City. Government officials also hinted at plans for mass arrests and demanded the trial and We ca punishment of all Palestinians who cast stones or fired acce t i weapons at Israeli troops. Others, including Netanyahu Maj. Ge spokesperson David Bar Illan, said the recent violence would lead Israel to demand new conditions for withdrawal of its troops from most of the West Bank city of Hebron, which was to have been carried out six months ago under Israeli- Palestinian self-rule accords. Israelii reinforcements yesterday included snipers, tanks, armored vehicles and attack helicopters posi- tioned in plain view outside the seven major cities of the West Bank. Maj. Gen. Uzi Dayan, the chief of Israel's Central Command, said he would not hesitate to use them if violence erupted again. Many new checkpoints appeared on primary and ) t secondary roads, and with a few medical exceptions, Palestinians were barred, often roughly, from crossing, them. Maj. Gen. Oren Shahor, who supervises the mili- tar' government of'the West Bank and Gaza Strip,: said in an interview in Jerusalem that the plan is to ring "all cities" and "all villages" of the Arabs with Israeli- troops, preventing people from entering or leaving except for some urgent humanitarian reason. A travel nnot ban of that magnitude has beek imposed only once before in Israel's nearly 29 years of r occupation. n. Oren Shahor Shahor and Dayan have- been closely identified with; the peace negotiations, and their comments yester- day and Saturday night reflected the army's stropg feeling of betrayal by members of Palestinian securi ty forces who fired on Israeli troops. Both had logged thousands of hours with their Palestinian counterparts and earned Netanyahu's suspicion as supporters of the previous Labor Party government's negotiating strategy. "We cannot accept that (Palestinian cities) will bt places from which they can act freely, shooting and killing our soldiers," Shahor said yesterday. "We can. not accept it." a Israeli protesters march from Mount Hertzel Cemetary in Jerusalem during a demonstration against recent government decisions. Sharif, sparked four days of street combat with IDEAST Continued from Page 1A violence under the current government. "'The Palestinian Authority has invoked the fighting in part through 41ir own anti-Israel rhetoric," said LSA senior Anthony Scaglione, Hillel's verning board chair. "Key members fArafat's cabinet have been participat- in demonstrations against tanyahu and the Israeli government, d by their example they have led oth- ers into protests." Muslim students said the excavation near the Al-Aqs4 mosque and the Dome of the Rock was an insult. "I think it's a bad diplomatic move. It shows a lack of sensitivity toward the needs of the Palestinian people and to :Muslims all over the world," said LSA .senior Asif Harsolia. Gitelman said the excavation was a political move as well as an archeologi- ca1 effort. 'Israeli Jews are making a political statement. There has long been archae- ATHLETES Continued from Page 1A "Because of the time schedule we're oh, registering to .vote is the farthest 4ing on our minds. By them (SAAC -d Voice'Your Vote) doing this, it saves lisne because otherwise a lot of people couIdn't do it," said Kinesiology rsphomore and football player Clarence 11iams, who was not able to make the event because of team obligations. Most students were generally under- stnding of the event's purpose. -If it dosen't cost extra money that could've been used for other students d if that's what it takes to get people to 'yrticipate, I'm all for it,' said School of Art and Design junior Senghor Reid. Organizers said they were happy with the results of the event. "This is the last week (to register to *ote) and we've registered some 5500 people since Welcome Week," said .Vice Your Vote member and LSA sertior Jae Jae Spoon. ological evidence.that Jerusalem is the capital of the Israeli kingdom. (Palestinians) want to minimize or eliminate the Jewish claim to the capi- tal,' he said. Students shared a hope for the possi- bility of peace in the region. "I felt very disappointed because I think they were taking many steps for- ward," said LSA junior John Ksar. "I'm concerned, for both sides. There's a lot of innocent people being killed." Most agreed that compromise would be the only solution. "lt's'really a warning for both sides to continue with dialogue and negotia- tions' said Rackham student Daniel Rosen. "There's only one path that's going to bring any solution and that's the path of peace." Students said they expected violence to erupt again and agreed that an end was hard to envision. "I always expected unrest. There's a lot -of long-term grudges being held," said LSA junior Syed Akbar. "It would take a lot of giving by both sides." Gitelman said that peace in the region "will not happen overnight." "It's not by accident that people use the term peace process,' he said. Students also said non-military American involvement was a good idea but weren't sure whether it could pro- duce results. "I don't know what they can do. In reality the U.S. can only push them so far. It has to be up to them," Akbar said. Gitelman said the United States is "the only body with the economic and political clout in the Mideast" to be able to encourage change. "They can act as an honest broker and bring the two parties together to moderate their positions and negotiate with each other" Gitelman said. Students said they were especially concerned for the welfare of friends and relatives living near the fighting, which has taken more than 70 lives so far. "It just scares me. I have a sister who was just there," Cosicher said. "I hope for (my family's) safety and well- being." THEFT Continued from Page :A "We have an open security system - some areas have alarms, others don't. We will be beefing. it up," Klausmeyer said. In fact, the insurance money that the museum hopes to receive as a result of the theft will most likely go to improv- ing the system. "We want to increase our alarm sys- tem. We will be checking things more regularly," Klausmeyer said. Museum officials said they were very upset about the crime. "I think that it was horrible that someone would do this. They are tak- ing something away from the citizens and the general public who come here to learn," said museum intern Jennifer Jaworski. The fossils were discovered missing by Adrienne Van den Bemmt, a tour guide. In a routine museum exercise, Van den Bemmt asked members of her tour group to find the five skulls, which were normally in the exhibit case. When only four could be found, Van den Bemmt alerted museum offi- cials. The crime was reported to DPS on Tuesday. "We wanted to make sure that the bones were not taken out for research purposes," Klausmeyer said. No one at the University was found to be studying the fossils at present. "There is no pattern of any criminal activity at the museum," said DPS spokesperson Elizabeth Hall. Klausmeyer noted, however, "Museums do get robbed." The museum has put a bulletin on the Internet museum bulletin board, Museum L, to inform and caution other museums about the crime. Anyone who has information about the crime can call either DPS at 763- I131 or the anonymous Confidential Assistance Network at 763-9180. There is a possible award to any tip leading to an arrest. FILIPINOS Continued from Page 1A touched on his own reflections of Filipino identity. "How much of history have we ... presented to the world in our own voice?" he asked the audience. "Today, Filipino pride has never risen to a higher level," Gonzalez said. "We take great pride in our being the fastest- growing Asian American population in the United States. What awaits is the composition of a grand narrative." Gonzalez's wife, Narita, said Gonzalez has 'become more anxious to finish his projects as he grows older. "He's driven' to write and finish his projects," said' Gonzalez's wife, Narita. She said of his books, "They are more popular in the Philippines. It's only now that they are beginning to read Filipino books in the United States. Narita Gonzalez said life with a liter- ary mogul can be interesting. "Being'a writer's wife., you must be tolerant to the writer's eccentricities," she said. Many students from Ginang Weller's Tagalog classes attended with their par- ents, who brought home-cooked meals. Students said Gonzalez's speech, inspired them to think about their own. identities. "He brought up some per-. spectives about being Filipino that 1 always had a feeling about but I've never been able to verbalize," said LSA junior Althea Caput, FASA yearbook captain. Tait .Sye, Asian Pacific American Coordinator for the office of Multi- Ethnic Student Affairs said Filipino Americans comprise the second-largest Asian American population, behind Chinese Americans. JERUSALEM Continued from Page IA Seventy people have died during gun bittles inthe Gaza Strip and the West Bank'"since the dead-of-night opening of the 500-yard tunnel last Tuesday, an action Palestinians saw as an attempt to cement Jewish control of although officials said it is certain that the tunnel will be a prime topic, as will the Israeli failure to withdraw troops occupying the West Bank city of Hebron, as previously agreed. Although the Clinton administration has privately concluded that Israel unwisely fueled the current crisis by opening the tunnel, it maintained public neutrality. "My business is not the The Psychological Clinic offers consultation and therapy to individuals and couples. We help people with anxiety, depression, relationship and family problems, work and study difficulties, and other concerns. Jerusalem. But deeper issues stem from the months-long s t al .e m a t c between Israelis and Palestinians over the next stage of the three-year-old peace process. Officials said the first round of. involve Clinton andt 4..4 fix-it business" - Warren Christopher Secretary of state blame busi- n e s s Ch r i stop her said. "My busi- ness is trying to get in the fix-it business." Netanyahu said Palestinian c o m p I a i n t s about the tunnel '- tell Information/ Appointments 764-3471 The Clinic is located in East Hall Suite 2463 525 East University The Clinic has a sliding scale fee. 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