-1. NATION/WORLD iinton welcomes back blacks LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - In a powerful gesture of racial healing, President Clinton pulled open the front door of Central High School yesterday and stood back to welcome nine blacks who had braved hate-filled mobs 40 years ago to break an all-white color barrier. "What happened here changed the course of our country forever," Clinton recalling a racial drama that wrenched America and was seared in history on television screens around the world. "Forty years ago today, they climbed these steps, passed through this door and moved our nation. And for that we must all thank them,' said Clinton. The audience - blacks and white together, - roared approval. ut even as he commemorated an portant, early victory of the civil rights movement, Clinton warned that American schools are resegregating, opportunities for jobs and education remain unequal and affirmative action programs are being rolled back, "slam- ming shut the doors of higher education on a new generation.' "Segregation is no longer the law," Clinton said. "but too often separation is still the rule. And we cannot forget stubborn fact that has not yet been sd as clearly as it should: There is still discrimination in America. "We have to keep working on it - not just with our voices but with our laws" the president said. "And we have to engage each other in it.' Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, a Republican, also stirred the crowd, say- ing, "What happened here 40 years ago was simply wrong. It was evil. And we pounce it." -Huckabee, a Baptist minister, said that in many parts of the South, "It was the white churches that helped not only ignore the problems of racism but in many cases actually fostered those feel- ings and those sentiments." He called on The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 26, 1997 - 7 Palestinian leaders blast Netanyahu over building plan. AP PHOTO President Clinton greets Thelma Mothershed Walr along with other members of "The Little Rock Nine" during ceremonies celebrating the 40th anniversary of the integration of Central High School in Little Rock, Ark. yesterday. all religious leaders "to say never, never, never, never again will we be silent?' Clinton was I1 years old during the Little Rock crisis, attending segregated schools 50 miles away in Hot Springs. "It was Little Rock that made racial equality a driving obsession in my life," he said. After a morning drizzle, skies turned blue and a warm sun beat down on Central students and hundreds of guests, includ- ing the family of the late "What hapi Supreme Court Justice changed ir Thurgood Marshall, a our countr civil rights pioneer Now mid- dIe-aged, the so - cal led Little Rock Nine - six women and three men - basked in cheers and applause, a sharp contrast to the taunts and jeers they braved as teen-agers. The president led them up Central's steps and he held open the school's heavy glass-paneled doors, greeting each of the nine with a handshake or a pat. Clinton was assisted by Huckabee and .. '4 Little Rock Mayor Jim Daley. The dramatic gesture had been sug- gested by students and by the nine who had been turned back, presidential spokesperson Mike McCurry said. One of the nine, Minnijean Brown Trickey, a social worker in Ontario, became overwhelmed and reached out emotionally to Clinton and Huckabee for comfort. Forty years ago, President Eisenhower ordered the Pened here Army's 101st Airborne 0 course of Division to Little Rock to fore ver. escort blacks - Bill Clinton into classes President after then- Gov. Orval Faubus mobi- lized the Arkansas National Guard to block integration. It was the first real test of the government's willingness to use force to implement the 1954 Supreme Court's Brown vs. Board of Education decision outlawing school segrega- tion. Nightly newscasts showed scenes of whites cursing blacks and spitting on them. Eisenhower said the specter of "mob rule" in Little Rock men- aced America's safety and allowed "gloating" Communists abroad to undermine U.S. prestige and influ- ence. The story of the Little Rock Nine has been told in films, books and documen- taries. Their names appear in history books, noted Ernie Green, Central's first black graduate and now an invest- ment executive. If one young person is inspired by their story, "then the Little Rock Nine become the Little Rock 10, the 10 a hundred, the 10,000, the 10 million," Green said. "Today, it's 40 years later. I wouldn't take anything for our journey" Green said. First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton recalled she had received an early les- son in courage as she watched the crisis on television "from my suburb outside of Chicago where I went to schools that were all white, where I lived with only white people." And the president lamented: "Too many Americans of all races have actu- ally begun to give up on the idea of inte- gration and the search for common ground.' Los Angeles Times EFRAT, West Bank - Palestinian leaders yesterday blasted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's promise to build hundreds of new hous- ing units in this Jewish settlement as "irresponsible, provocative and.unnec- essary." Israeli officials defended the pro- posed buildup in Efrat as "natural growth," but Marwan Kanafani, a spokesperson for Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, called it "a severe blow" to efforts to restart peace negotiations. "The guy has a lust for Palestinian land. Every time there is some hope, he throws another obstacle in the path of peace;' Kanafani said of Netanyahu. Settlement building is at the root of the current crisis in Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations, which have been frozen since last March, when Netanyahu gave the green light to build a 6,500-unit Jewish housing project in traditionally Arab East Jerusalem. Meanwhile, Palestinian security forces last night closed 16 Islamic social service organizations in the Gaza Strip and a television station in the West Bank city of Nablus that is identified with the militant Islamic group Hamas. Palestinian agents entered the offices after closing time, when most workers' had left for the day, and sealed them with notices stating they were "not to be entered without the permission of police." Israeli radio reported that the Palestinians also arrested dozens of Hamas activists in the West Bank cities of Nablus, Qalqilya and Tulkarem, but this could not be independently veri- fied. Abdel Aziz Rontizi, a Hamas politi- cal leader in Gaza, said three employees of one of the Islamic organizations had been arrested, but that he was unaware of any Hamas political or military lead- ers who had been detained. The Hamas military wing claimed responsibility for two multiple suicide attacks in downtown Jerusalem this summer that killed 25 people, including five bombers. Israel recently identified four of the bombers as Hamas militants from a Palestinian village outside'of Nablus, embarrassing Arafat, who had insisted they came from abroad. Hamas leaders said the Palestinian. Authority's crackdown on Islaniia kindergartens, youth clubs and agencies to aid the poor was a response to U.S. and Israeli pressure on Arafat. "Negotiations are to begin between the Israelis and Palestinians in' Washington, and they (the Palestinians} are paving the way in front of these negotiations" Rontizi said."Netanyahu is paving the way by promising settlei to widen the settlements. Different ways of paving." On Wednesday, Netanyahu told high school students at a 30th anniversary celebration of the so-called Gush Etzion settlements that he would build 300 new homes in Efrat and expanid other communities in the Israeli occu- pied area on the southern outskirts 'of Jerusalem. The speech drew immediate fire from U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine, Albright at the United Nations, prompt- ing Israeli government officials to try to downplay the planned construction as a continuation of existing policy. "This government is not searching for friction. It is not intending that its actions be construed in a provocative manner," said government spokesper- son Moshe Fogel. "What we are saying is pure logic that we believe can be accepted by anyone who looks at th7e situation from a logical point of view if -wV~i7 Fl UNIVERSITY CA'ERING. Wait staff VARSITY BASEBALL managers needed. CAREGIVER FOR 1 & 5 yr. old sons in SPRING BREAK '98 Cancun from $389 needed. No exp. necessary. $10/hour. For Part-time paid position. Contact Ian at 763- our NE A2 home. 10 hrs./wk. in 1997 and 20 Reps wanted! Sell 15 and go free! Thurs., Sept. 25, Fri., Sept. 26, and Sat., Sept. 5215. hrs./wk. in '98. Own trans. and genuine love 15 free meals Lowest Prices Guaranteed 27. Afternoon & evening shifts. Please call WANTED!! Full time aid for 3rd grader who of kids. 663-5635. Call 1-800-446-8355 www.sunbreaks.com 764-2142. hoe~ 911Y1 at an 11V11'l4n 1K y rtn ~ ~ in sa t i~i..f.1 1f1T T T C ( -..-. - 1 lf Let the adventure begin. 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Reacting to the uproar over press intrusion following the death of Princess Diana, the Press Complaints Commission asked edi- tors yesterday to voluntarily adopt "the toughest set of industry regula- tions anywhere in Europe.' "Motorbike chases, stalking and hounding are unacceptable - and editors who carry pictures obtained by them will be subjected to the severest censure" said the commis- sion's chair, Lord Wakeham. "I have found that editors across the industry have been of the same mind - times have changed - and we want to change with them," he said in outlining the new code at a news conference. However, work continued on details of the code, including con- flicts between an "overriding public interest" and personal privacy - questions which are acute in cover- n r - _-_._t.V_.1. . _a sues William, 15, and Prince Harry, 13, who are back at their boarding schools a month after their mother's death Aug. 31 in a Paris car crash, Nine photographers and a press motorcyclist, most of them French, are under investigation in Paris for" their alleged roles in the crash, which also killed Diana's friend Dodi Fayed and their driver, Henri Paul. When the code is finalized, edi- tors will have to justify the behav- ior not only of their staff, but of any freelancer whose material they use, and if they expose someone's private life they will have to show there is an "overriding" public -_ interest. 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