2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 31, 1997 NATION/WORLD Violent clashes continue in West Bank . Angeles Times N ABLUS, West Bank - Palestinian demonstrators ,claashed with Israeli forces throughout the West Bank yesterday, but Palestinian police intervened to contain the violence. I most of the West Bank cities, Palestinian youths bujgd tires and threw stones at Israeli troops guarding Jewish shrines. Scores of protesters were treated for rub- ber-bullet wounds and tear-gas inhalation, but there *waenone of the feared fatalities. dWith Israeli tanks positioned on the edge of town, Arab police in the Palestinian-ruled city of Nablus fired It9 the air and formed a human chain to keep about 5,000 demonstrators away from Israeli soldiers at Joseph's Tomb, a Jewish shrine. Israeli army chiefs had warned that they would intervene if the Palestinians failed to keep control at the site - as they did in September, when six soldiers were killed during riots. Fatah, the political organization of Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat, had called for the mass demonstrations to protest Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's decision to launch a new Jewish neighborhood on a hill in southeastern Jerusalem that Israelis call Har Homa and Palestinians call Jabal Abu Ghneim. It was the Palestinians' 1lth consecutive day of street skirmishes over the settlement, but yesterday's protests were arranged to coincide with Palestinian demonstrations in Israel marking Land Day. The day commemorates a 1976 protest over the expropriation of Arab-owned land in northern Israel in which six Palestinians were killed by Israeli troops. Sunday's protests began in the village of Beit Sahur, near Bethlehem, when thousands of mourners marched behind the Palestinian-flag-draped body of a 20-year-old university student shot dead in clashes with Israeli troops the night before. Fatah distributed color photographs of the engineering student to honor "the martyr, the hero, Abdullah Salah." Oklahoma bombing trial begins today DENVER -When Oklahoma bombing suspect Timothy McVeigh goes on trial today, there is one difference from two years ago: The case against him does not seem nearly as solidl as it once did. The government still cannot place the 28-year-old defendant at the site of t explosion that killed 168 women, children and men and injured 500 others. It ca not place in his hands the ammonium nitrate used in the bomb. It also has no con- fession, despite the leak of several reported McVeigh "confessions" that tumbled into media reports in recent weeks. Witnesses have identified McVeigh as the nervous customer renting the truck two days before the bombing. His jeans, T-shirt, knife and ear plugs reportedly were covered with forensic evidence matching chemical components found inside the truck. And he had ranted for years against perceived government abuses, espe- cially the failed 1993 FBI raid at the Branch Davidian compound at Waco, Texas. But his defense lawyers have woven a pattern of doubt into the government's case. They have highlighted widespread problems of contamination at the once-fam4 FBI crime lab, where McVeigh's clothing was examined. They have conjured up con- spiracy theories indicating others may have had a larger role in the bombing. They have hinted about foreign terrorist cells operating in the Philippines and Europe. Don't Panic!! If you think you're pregnant... call us-we listen, we care, PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP 769-7283 Any time, any day, 24 hours. fully confidential. Serving Students since 197. Gingrich concludes 3-day visit to ChiOna House speaker expresses enthusiasm for China's future Los Angeles Tunes SHANGHAI, China - House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who only a year ago was accusing the Chinese gov- ernment of "terrorism" in the Taiwan Strait, bubbled with enthusiasm for China's leadership, its economy, its his- tory and its promise as he concluded a three-day visit here yesterday with IlI other members of Congress in tow. The way to deal with China, the Georgia Republican said during his visit, is to smother it with a kind of diplomat- ic tough love: "constant pressure, con- stant friendship and constant dialogue." "If you can be respectful but firm' Gingrich commented as he prepared to board a plane for Japan en route to Taiwan, "you can get a long way with China." For example, Gingrich said he told China's leaders point-blank that they should expect a fight if they ever try to invade Taiwan. "I told them we will defend Taiwan. Period," he said. "The thing that was striking to me is that we never got into an argument about it. They basically said that they didn't intend to invade Taiwan, so we would not have to defend it." The Gingrich delegation was by far the liveliest entourage to hit China in recent months, if not years. In terms of verve and audacity, it eclipsed last week's visit by Vice President Al Gore. Despite the conventional wisdom that diplomatic dealings here require extreme subtlety and tact, the Chinese leadership - which had been trying for more than two years to get the speaker to visit - appeared to enjoy the "out- Great W eescpfor as (ow as $109 From MasterCard and United Airlines! Take Off For The Weekend With United Airlines And Return The following Monday Or Tuesday To Get ubstantIa( Savings When -You U.e Your MasterCard..Card. spoken Gingrich" routine as much as he enjoyed performing it. Chinese President Jiang Zemin used the occasion of his meeting to declare, rather poetically, that U.S.-China rela- tions had entered a state of "sunshine after the rain' Perhaps inspired by his Chinese host, Gingrich also waxed poetic, at one point describing China's delicate task in managing the July 1 return of Hong Kong to Beijing rule as that of a giant holding an orchid. "Our concern," Gingrich said he told Chinese leaders, "is how to handle the orchid without crushing it. ... If the giant has learned to hold the orchid, then, in fact, you will be seen very dif- ferently everywhere in the world." As he prepared to leave yesterday, Gingrich, who has been one of China's harshest critics on matters related to Taiwan and human rights, could not say enough good things about his experience in China. At one point, he confided to a politi- cal officer at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing that his meetings with the Chinese leadership were "the high point of my public life." Gingrich said he was leaving China optimistic about the fate of Hong Kong, which will be restored to mainland sov- ereignty in July. He also theorized that for ethnic and economic reasons, China and Taiwan would eventually "evolve" into one state. And he spoke glowingly about new freedoms that have come to the Chinese as the result of the country's double- digit economic growth. "You are now dramatically freer than you were 25 years ago' he told stu- dents at the Foreign Affairs College of Beijing, where he delivered a free- wheeling lecture Saturday. EASTER Continued from Page 1A Catholic and Greek Orthodox, Easter remains as a major festival," Williams said. "Even in Protestant churches it remains a very large presence." Williams said those who call them- selves Christians usually gather at church, but many people today claim the holiday has become commercial- ized and may have lost some of the reli- gious significance. "There certainly are large laments that this is the case," Williams said. "Also, it is the case that very many in the community of churches look upon Easter as a deep spiritual movement. "(For some) it seems to be a festival of animals and, Easter eggs, chocolate bunnies, and for others it is a day of deep spiritual meditation," Williams said. Many students who live close enough to return home did so yesterday in order to spend time with their families. LSA sophomore Brock Blazo returned to his home in Lapeer on Friday for the holiday. "I went to church on Saturday night' Blazo said. "We had relatives over for brunch on Sunday, aunts and uncles." Blazo said the holiday for him is mostly about gathering with family. "It is kind of just being together," Blazo said. "I guess I am not really a deeply religious person." Art first-year student Stephen McKenna said he went with his girl- friend to her aunt's house in Ann Arbor. "We spent the night at her house and then we got up and got Easter baskets full of jelly beans, chocolate eggs, those little Reese's peanut butter eggs and Milk Duds," he said. McKenna said that even though he is not a deeply religious person, the holi- day still holds some religious meaning for him. g g HUE E_ Clinton to name NATO commander WASHINGTON - President Clinton has picked Army Gen. Wesley Clark to become the next top NATO military commander and head of U.S. forces in Europe, senior defense offi- cials reported yesterday. The appointment is arguably the sec- ond-most significant military appoint- ment Clinton will have to make this year, after naming a new chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, given the con- troversial issues confronting the United States and its European allies, includ- ing NATO expansion, relations with Russia and operations in Bosnia. "We wanted someone who's both a soldier and a statesman, someone with diplomatic and policy experience," a senior Pentagon official said, adding that formal announcement of the selec- tion is expected today. He was the senior military member on the team, led by diplomat Richard Holbrooke, that brokered the 1995 Dayton peace accords. The accords A~oUNDTHE'WOLEI.."16 Cambodian leader attacked by grenade PHNOM PENH, Cambodia - Attackers hurled a grenade into a politi- cal protest yesterday in an apparent assassination attempt on Cambodia's main opposition leader that could threat- en the country's fragile democracy. Eleven people died and 112 were wounded - including one American - in the attack that followed predic- tions of-worsening political violence as parties maneuver before legislative elections planned for November 1998. San Rainsy, head of the Khmer National Party, was slightly injured by shrapnel in his leg. He said he owed his life to a bodyguard who died when he threw himself on the political leader to shield him. Blood stained the grass and street after the attack on 200 protesters out- side the National Assembly, where Rainsy had been leading the rally against alleged interference in the judi- cial system by Second Premier Hun Sen and his Cambodian People's Party. Rainsy blamed Hun Sen -his long- time nemesis - for the attack, saying the grenade was thrown by police ar- army "terrorists" taking orders fro Hun Sen's formerly communist party. "Hun Sen ... should be sentenced and arrested," said Rainsy, his clothes soaked in blood and the left lens of his glasses cracked. Colombia heroin spreads to U.S. SAN JOSE DE LAS HERMOSAS, Colombia - Standing waist-high in poppy flowers, a peasant slits a plant. bulb with a razor. Opium gum, the key ingredient in heroin, oozes from the gash. But Colombians have promoted the drug with the same entrepreneurial agili- ty they applied to cocaine, making strong inroads in the biggest U.S. heroin market - the Northeast. American officials s4 they account for at least 80 percent ' heroin sales in the New York area. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. stopped the fighting in Bosnia and set terms for the NATO-led peacekeeping force. Now head of the U.S. Southern Command, Clark will be following i the footsteps of two other Army ge erals who went from there to the post of supreme allied commander in Europe. Negotiator says U.S. shortchanged Jews WASHINGTON - The U.S. gov- ernment shortchanged Jewish groups seeking restitution aft* World War I1 by at least $5.5 mil- lion, according to the chief American negotiator from the post- war settlement talks. Swiss banks have come under interna- tional fire for holding onto Jewish assets deposited during the war. But the United States also failed to turn over money deposited by Jews who perished in the Holocaust, said Seymour Rubin, the chief negotiator for postw* restitution. WeekendertZ- ne 1r er a ountrp 1kates Within Zone A or B $129 roundtrip Between Zone A & Zone B $189 roundtrip Between Zone A & Zone C $269 roundtrip P~h~ion 7no RQ. 7189r(tdP r imrt Promo Code: AV0027 Ticket Designator: AV0027 Travel Complete: June 6,1997 use Your M'aterc ordo Card . For G&eat vins U Onrited Airlines. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745.967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are 4 $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, yearlong (September through April) is $165. On-campus sub- scriptions for fail term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. 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