nnan's many m BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Kofi Annan's aides saw it as a good omen: Iraq allowed the U.N. secretary-gener- al's plane to land at the mostly deserted Saddam Hussein International Airport. A small, but significant gesture. U.N. personnel normally must fly into a drab military airfield and drive more than an hour to Baghdad. By letting Annan use the closer interna- tional airport, the Iraqis were telegraphing that they had high hopes for the visit. But success was not instant. In three days of negotiating, close aides said. Annan had to listen to long lists of Iraqi grievances, deciding which to answer and which to let pass in the interests of focusing on his immediate mission. A U.N. linguist had to offer draft after draft of a final agreement, looking for language booby traps. And U.N. offi- cials discussed intently how Annan should handle his most critical meeting. with Saddam himself. The mission began as Annan, dressed in a gray suit, stepped from his French government jet shortly after 6 p.m. Friday, Iraqi dignitaries and foreign diplomats were lined up to welcome him. Annan said he was optimistic his mission would succeed. Iraq's deputy prime minister, Tariq Aziz, standing next to him in an olive green uniform, said he shared "the secretary-general's Soptim ism." But like good poker players, the Iraqis were careful not to show their hands. Aziz met Annan and his party Friday night, but the session was most- ly social. Day two for Annan began at 7:30 a.m. He rose early to begin preparing for his first formal session with the Iraqis. Russian envoy Viktor Posuvalyuk arrived at the pink stucco villa where Annan was staying to brief the secre- NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, February 24, 1998 - 7 quick deal took onths to reach tary-general on his own marathon talks with the Iraqis. As the two sat in red-cushioned chairs in a marble-floored salon, aides said Posuvalyuk believed Baghdad was ready for serious talks - already hint- ed at by Iraq's U.N. ambassador. Shortly before 10 a.m., Annan and his eight-member delegation were dri- ven to the Iraqi Foreign Ministry across the muddy Tigris River. After handshakes for the cameras. Annan and Aziz left for a private room. where they remained for the next 90 minutes - the start of about 15 hours of diplomacy in which the U.N. chief would often negotiate alone. While U.N. officials and Iraqi Cabinet members lounged on sofas or strolled aimlessly, Annan presented Aziz with a U.N. memorandum that outlined broad terms of a settlement. After the lengthy private meeting, the two summoned other negotiators. As the two delegations sat across a wooden table in a small paneled confer- ence room. aides said Aziz railed on for about an hour detailing Iraq's com- plaints against the U.N. weapons inspection program. Aziz, again wearing a green military uniform, complained the inspectors now wanted to wander through the president's private residences and rum- mage through his possessions - which no sovereign nation could tolerate. Annan, a reserved figure who rarely raises his voice above a whis- per, listened impassively. Envoys and foreign leaders familiar with the Iraqis advised him not to get bogged down in point-by-point rebuttals and to keep the discussions focused on major topics. When his turn came to speak, Annan said that regardless of what the govern- ment thought of the inspection pro- gram, Security Council resolutions requiring Iraq to destroy its lethal weaponry must be respected. lie referred to the U.S. and British buildup in the Persian Gulf. "The mili- tary option is close to being exercised," aides quoted Annan as saying. Annan also told Aziz that the two had to decide on something to tell the hun- dreds of journalists from all over the world who had gathered in Baghdad for the showdown. Aziz suggested they describe the meeting as a "constructive dialogue." They adjourned at 1 p.m., and Annan told the reporters he was "rather opti- mistic" a deal could be reached. At the secretary-general's villa, Annan and his aides talked over the morning session and concluded that Aziz's strong criticism of the inspection program did not mean the Iraqis were stonewalling. The best way to push the negotiations forward, Annan told them, was to avoid allowing the talks to degenerate into mutual recriminations. They met at 6 p.m. That session went better. Instead of polemics. the two sides went through the negotiating memorandum line by lie -in English marking areas of disagreement in brackets. Once all those points were identified, the Iraqis suggested changes in the text. No agreement was reached yet, but the two sides understood one another better. The meeting adjourned at 9:15 p.m. for dinner. Aziz went to a meeting of the ruling Revolutionarv Command Council to brief Saddam. Back at Annan's villa, the chief U.N. legal officer. Hans C'orell, made chan'ges in the draft memorandum. An accomplished linguist fluent in several languages. Corell had to ensure the document's language was flexible enough to satisfy both sides but precise enough to prevent the Iraqis from rein- terpreting the language ifthe agreement was signed. AP PHOTO President Clinton meets reporters in the Oval Office of the White House yesterday to discuss the tentative United Nations agreement with Iraq. The president gave his cautious blessings to the U.N. agreement with Saddam Hussein. IRAQ Continued from Page 1 reprieve from the contemplated bom- bardment, which has been aimed at damaging some of the facilities that NSCOM had been prevented from inspecting. In meetings with Clinton and his Cabinet-level advisers, Gaen. IHlenrv Shelton, the chair of the .Ioint Chiefs of Staff, had conveyed "the strong sense that if there was a vav for the cup to pass, that the military w\oulld like to see the cup pass. sl d one of Shelton's four- sidir 1i1 Iformed con tem poraries. -WC had a tough time seeing where this thing was going to take us." Clinton stressed that the accord permits the inspectors "repeat visits and no deadlines to complete their work." Each point represents aban- donment of a previous Iraqi demand. But some of the U.S. and U.N. officials most closely involved in the subject said unhappily that the new arrangement gave implicit support to Iraqi charges that the existing panel cannot be trusted to do its work without a new layer of oversight. They said they worried that Annan's apparent intentioni to ;give a new name to the expanded panel could create a bureaucratic rival to UNSCOM, as the present special panel is known, and its executive chair, the Australian diplomat Richard Butler. "The questions one could ask are what is the role of the secre- tary-general, what are the roles of these characters, can you still do a no-notice inspection, do the inspections have to be approved in advance by any group, how large are the facilities these new proce- dures apply to, and are there new modalities to be approved on any of this?" said one official who has monitored the weapons inspection program. "The inclination is to think that ('.N. inspectors') ability to do the job is not going to be favorably affected by this." Dance of the devil ASSAULITS Continued from Page 1 victims' descriptions of the assailants were not thorough enough to identify the suspects. The suspects "are still out there and no one has cone for- ward to tell us .,who they are.' Smiley said. Smilev said he does net belie hiast cekend 's events mark the beginning of a trend. But he said DPS will increase the nuibher of patrols in the area where the attacks took place. "We fcigure this was a ramdom hit rather than the start of a series of occurrences," Smiley said. "We'll heighten Four of the victims reported minor physical injuries, and DPS reported that one victim needed hospitalization after being found incoherent and intoxicated near the Fleming Administration Building. The assaults occurred around 2 a.m. Sunday morning -- the same time Scorekeepers and other area bars close. Ton Slaywood, executive director of the State Street Area Association, an association that represents the interests of area businesses. said more police presence in recent years has helped deter fights that may occur as people leave local bars. "Merchants here are pleased with what the city has done ill the past three years to increase police presence downtown" Haywood said. "But you can't make sure people are protect- ed 100 percent of the time." patrols in that area at least for this end." COM PETITION Continued from Page 1 ed not to participate. Most of the participants placed the Styrofoam peanuts on the bottom, hold- ing them together with the five tooth- picks. Although many of the boats looked similar, the differences in per- (upconming) week- formance resulted from intricate con- siderations such as toothpick angling and popsicle stick positioning. Every participant who constructed a boat deemed seaworthy was given a University Engineering Week T-shirt. Engineering junior Carol Lee said she did not feel much pressure to win but was happy to work on an activity with her Engineering cohorts. "I think we have no chance" of win- ning, Lee said. "But it's just for fun." Zagumny's first-place effort was fol- lowed by Engineering junior Michael Baldarotta whose boat remained afloat with 152 pennies. Engineering graduate student Weiping Zhong finished in third- place with 143 pennies. AIDS Continued from Page 1 ProjectSERVE. LSA sophomore Shira Lee Katz, co-director of Speaker Initiative. said "we have got a lot of money together .which allowed us to consider White-Ginder in the first place." LSA first-year student Avedis Magar said she is "really glad to see different groups within the University communi- ty coming together to achieve something of this scale. "Hopefully. Thursday will set a precedent of Speaker Initiative's commitment to bringing influential and educa- tional speakers to this campus." Reich agreed that getting White-Ginder to visit the University's campus was important. "Jeanne is an inspirational speaker and this is a very impor- tant issue on a college campus because it affects everyone. (AIDS) doesn't care what group you are a member of or what you look like on the outside," Reich said. "Hopefully, Speaker Initiative will one day be adopted and funded as a University organization. Such a group optimizes what (University) President (Lee) Bollinger wants to tackle in the future,"he said. A Haitian dressed as the devil performs during carnival celebrations in Jacmel, Haiti on Sunday. Tens of thousands celebrated the 300th anniversary of the city's foundation. U r1 11tw ludH EARN GREAT WAGES as LUNCH waitstaff, hostess or cashiers-U-Club-first floor Michigan Union. Meals, incentives and a great work environment. Apply in person to _ arla. RN UP TO $20-$40/hr. Sales aggressive strident needed to market/manage credit card promotion of Fortune 500 Company. Work your own hours, no travel required. Call 800- 645-9052. FEM. QUADRAPALEGIC needs eve. help. 8:30-10. 3, 4, or 5 weeknights 761-2542. FREE T-SHIRT +$1010 Credit Card fundraisers for fraternities, sororities, & groups. 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