-NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily -Friday, October 30, 1998 - 7 Clinton 'thrilled' by Glenn launch Human rights record criticized The Washington Post CAPE CANAVERAL - His view was better than most, but President Clinton said he was here as a specta- tor, not the sponsor, of John Glenn's celebrated trip back into space. Clinton, joined by Hillary Rodham Clinton and a delegation of astro- nauts, watched the blast-off from the roof of NASA's launch control center, where the president stood entranced and speechless for a full minute as the space shuttle Discovery made its Ifiery climb. "Absolutely thrilled," Clinton said when asked for his reac- tion moments after liftoff. Earlier, Clinton dismissed specula- tion that he had played a role in approving Glenn's return as a thank- you token for the senator's support. "I think the American people should know that the decision to send him was made strictly by the book," Clinton told Walter Cronkite on CNN. "I had no role in it," Clinton said, adding, "If I had my druthers, he'd be home in Ohio running for re-election right now." Clinton may not have initiated Glenn's return to space, but he was reveling in it yesterday, as he became the first president ever to witness a space shuttle launch and the first to see any manned space launch since Glenn's his GLENN Continued from Page 1 white heat of its churning main engines still visible as a bright daytime star for several minutes, until it hurtled out of sight about 70 miles down range and 43 miles high. The countdown had twice been delayed, for a total of 20 nerve- wracking minutes, first by a minor technical glitch and then to shoo off some errant airplanes that intruded into the 600 square miles of cleared air space around the launch complex. The delays "made us a little tense, made the rookie launch director sweat a little bit," said KSC Launch Director Ralph Roe. Another cause for tension came later. In replays of the launch on high-definition TV, flight con- trollers determined that a panel had flipped loose from the orbiter's tail at the moment the powerful main engines were started, dinging the center main engine valve. Launch manager Donald McMonagle said the team will do a thorough analysis but "at this point we know of no impact to the mis- Richard Nixon viewed the Apollo 12 lift-off in November 1969. With four days until the midterm elections, Clinton used yesterday's event to appeal to Americans to vote. "So if you feel patriotic when you see John Glenn and the others go up in space today, then keep that patriotic feeling until next Tuesday and go and vote for the candidate and programs and the issues of your choice;"he told CNN. As Clinton told it yesterday, Glenn himself was eager to have him attend. He said while he was in Maryland last week for Middle East peace negotiations, an aide told him Glenn was on the phone. "I thought, 'Oh my goodness, something hap- pened, he can't go"' But Clinton said, Glenn told him, "I just called to make sure you're not going to chicken out onme." In coming to here, Clinton was also taking care of some unfinished per- sonal business, he told NASA work- ers in a visit with the staff of the Firing Room a few minutes after lift- off. A year ago, he said, Hillary Clinton suggested they make a list of the things they want to do before leav- ing office. "I said, 'OK, what's on your list?;" he recalled. "She said, 'You have to take me to a space launch."' The Washington Post GAZA CITY-In the six days since Israel and the Palestinians signed an interim peace accord in Washington, Palestinian police have detained jour- nalists, imprisoned an Islamic cleric who dared criticize the accord and launched a wave of arrests of suspected Islamic activists. Under the terms of the land-for-securi- ty agreement, Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat pledged to crack down on terrorist groups operating from areas controlled by the Palestinians, and clamp down on anti-Israeli incitement on their airwaves. Those moves were demanded by the Israelis, backed by President Clinton and, finally, accepted by Arafat. In practice, though, it's not so simple and could make a bad human rights record in Palestinian-controlled areas much worse, say human rights groups here and in the West. They argue the accord, coupled with pressure from Washington and Israel, could promote a Palestinian police state in Israel's back yard. "What's happened in the last five years under the slogan of peace? The first victim was human rights;' said Raji Sourani, head of the Palestinian Center for .Human Rights in Gaza. "Security for us has meant waves of arrests, state security courts, restric- tions on free speech and a lack of respect for the law.' The implications of a Palestinian crackdown on terror and incitement may give rise to more ticklish questions for the United States than the text of the peace accord suggests: In encouraging the Palestinians to wage war on terror, should the Clinton administration support the swift but often brutal justice of Palestinian state security courts, which specialize in summary trials, often starting after midnight, with no right to counsel? Should it speak out against Palestinian detention of terror suspects who are imprisoned for months or years without charges or trials? Should it raise the issue of torture in Palestinian prisons, where 20 detainees have died in recent years? The dilemma for Washington is even more problematic now that the United States has established itself, under the terms of the new accord, as a kind of super-referee to enforce what Israel expects of the Palestinians and vice versa. "The Palestinian Authority's human rights record is already deplorable," said Hanny Megally, Middle East divi- sion director for Human Rights Watch in Washington. "The U.S. doesn't con- demn these violations now. Will the U.S. condemn violations once it is part of the process that creates them?" NATHAN RUFFER/Daily Biomedical engineering graduate student Mike Stucky watches the launch of the spaceshuttle carrying John Glenn yesterday in the Michigan Union. ico~r toric shuttle launch is near perfect TEMPORARY POSITIONS EARN HOLIDAY DOLLARS/ BUILD) :.:. Phraeuia YOUR RESUME sign." During the launch, Glenn, 77, was seated in the middeck, behind the pilots' cockpit, with astronaut Steve Robinson and Japanese payload spe- cialist Chiaki Mukai, who are all making their second flights. To see out, Glenn would have had to crane his neck to the left. Eight and a half minutes after lift-off, the space travelers reached the magic moment of "MECO" - main engine cutoff. The world of the shuttle cabin went silent, the sky had gone black, the apricot tank had fallen away, and they set- tled into orbit at a velocity of about 18,000 miles per hour. And they were weightless. Back in orbit, Glenn soon let go the straps and floated out of his seat - back in orbit after 36 years. Discovery commander USAF Lt. Col Curt Brown Jr. and copilot USAF Lt. Col. Steven Lindsey piloted their winged space plane into an orbit about 340 miles high - three times as high as Glenn's first flight. As they passed over Hawaii, Brown commented: "Let the record show that John has a smile on his face that goes from one ear to the other one and "Let the record show that John has a smile on his race that ,goes from one ear to the other one ..."f -- USAF Lt. Colonel Curt Brown Jr. Discovery Commander " The Worldwide Drug Safety Surveillance department at Parke-Davis is currently hiring students/extems to perform data entry of adverse event information. 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The nine-day, $400 million mis- sion, the 92nd flight of the shuttle program, carries an international crew in pursuit of an unusually wide variety of research goals. In these respects, NASA says, the flight foreshadows a "new era" for human spaceflight. This phase is to begin in less than a month when a Russian Proton rocket lifts off carrying the first component of the planned, U.S.-led international space sta- tion, a million-ton research labora- tory to be constructed in space by spacewalking astronauts over a five-year period. "You name it, we have it," Brown said earlier, describing his mission's varied payloads and packed schedule. It is "a stepping stone, I think, between current shuttle operations and the space station." While the public focus to date has been on Glenn's research on aging and the effects of weight- lessnes, Discovery carries more than 80 experiments and l1 tons of cargo that, officials say span the realm from the inner universe of the human body to studies of the sun. The cargo includes an unusu- ally varied set of commercial biotechnology experiments, and a record 20 laptops to handle the sci- ence data recording. The researchers will study oyster toad- fish and cockroaches in weight- lessness. In addition to his role as guinea pig and experimenter for research on aging, Glenn is to help crewmates with dozens of other operations before the shuttle returns to Earth Nov. 7. :r " I, t G. 10. 9. 8. 7. 6. The Top Ten Reasons To Re-Elect Mayor Sheldon She was born at U-M Hospital. Able to spell U-M at a very early age. Ingrid has a master's degree from U-M. She is a former U-M sorority advisor. Daughter Amy is a U-M graduate. AAA! EARLY SPRING Break Specials! 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