NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 12, 1998 - 7A s Israels ratify accords' JERUSALEM (AP)- Israel's gov- ernment narrowly ratified the land- for-peace agreement with the Palestinians yesterday, setting the stage for withdrawal from West Bank territory and an expansion of Palestinian autonomy. Prodded by the United States, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pushed the deal through the Cabinet with far less support than he anticipated. To secure the votes of hard-liners opposed to any deal offering land-for- peace, he also attached conditions that may provoke a new crisis. Eight of 17 ministers voted in favor, five ministers abstained and four voted against the deal struck between Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat at the Wye summit in Maryland. The plan calls for Israel to withdraw its troops from 13 percent of the West Bank in exchange for securi- ty guarantees. Approval of the deal came after weeks of delay, caused in part by an Islamic militant suicide-bombing that injured 21 Israelis. Secretary of State Madeleine Ultra-orthodox Israelis gain clout Los Angeles Times JERUSALEM - In an electoral victory that will intensify the fight over this disputed city's character and future, religious and ultra-Orthodox parties won nearly half the seats in Jerusalem's city council, election results showed yesterday. The growing influence of the ultra- Orthodox and the efforts by secular Jews to oppose that influence represent the greatest single social conflict in Israel today. Antagonism between the religious, who make up about a third of Jerusalem's population, and the secular has flared on numerous fronts, from whether to close major streets on the Jewish Sabbath to whether city money should be spent on semi-private reli- gious schools. But the majority of secular Jerusalem residents apparently stayed home for the elections: Turnout among the reli- gious in Jerusalem was estimated at 80 percent, compared to around 40 percent for the secular. Ehud Olmert, a secular candidate of the ruling right-wing Likud Party, who has nonetheless catered to Orthodox demands, was re-elected mayor of Jerusalem in a landslide. Two ultra-Orthodox parties - Shas. which represents Sephardic Jews, of Middle Eastern or North African origin, and the United Torah Judaism, which represents Ashkenazi, or European, Jews took 12 seats on the 31-member council. The National Religious Party, with a similar agenda, took an additional three seats, for a 15-member bloc. Previousiv, the religious parties had held 13 places. The ultra-Orthodox demand strict observance of Sabbath and have scuf- fled violently with Jews who would violate the day of rest by driving or going to restaurants. They maintain that they are fighting to preserve Jewish values and live pious lives. Extremely tight-knit and well-orga- nized, the religious parties are easily able to get out the vote. During the campaign, Shas activists distributed holy oil, amulets and candles to make the point that voting was part of a sacred duty that would be rewarded. Yitzhak Kadouri, a revered Shas rabbi, offered a special blessing. Yesterday, haredim leaders said they would use their council power to push for more schools, religious day care centers and ritual baths. The secular, many of whom are on Israel's political left, complain that the haredim want to ram religion down their throats and impose their vision of Jewish identity on others. An Israeli right-wing demonstrator wears a Clinton mask in Tel Aviv yesterday, as he demonstrates with thousands of other conservative Israelis against turning over parts of the West Bank to Palestinian control. Albright called the vote an important step in the peace process. The Palestinians welcomed ratification with caution, but dismissed the condi- tions as "violations." Jewish settlers, some of whom will find themselves in isolated West Bank areas after the withdrawal, lashed out at the government for giving up land that settlers consider to be their bibli- cal birthright. "For Sale: State of Israel, a give- away," read a large banner at a protest rally where more than 10,000 settlers and their supporters gathered in Tel Aviv as the Cabinet met. FRATERN ITI ES ontinued from Page 1A oing to work together," Holeman said. Holcman added that the Greek Social Environment Task Force will present a report to the University and Greek community on Dec. 11. He said the report will focus on the role alcohol plays within the Greek community. Holeman said the task force, which is comprised of 10 fraternity *nd sorority presidents and four alternates, hosts different themes each week. This semester the task force plans to talk with AAPD offi- cers, University administrators and community members. - Daily Staff Reporter Jewel Gopwani contributed to this report. GEO Continued from Page IA Gamble said GSIs currently earn $16.34 per hour, and the proposal would increase that to $22.38 per hour. While economic matters dominated last night's bar- gaining sessions, a number of other contentious issues remain unresolved. Between now and the current contract's Feb. I expi- ration, negotiators will have to deal with GEG pro- posals concerning affirmative action, medical and dental benefits, training compensation, employment definition and non-discrimination issues. During Tuesday's bargaining session, the GEO negotiating team proposed two changes to the previ- ous contract's non-discrimination clause. Currently, some departments' graduate employee appointment applications include questions about tuition status. GEO Bargaining Committee spokesper- son Chip Smith said these questions discriminate against out-of-state applicants. "Because the departments pay for our tuition, it costs them more to hire out-of-state people," Smith said. The other proposal dealt with the "10 term rule," which is a University-wide policy restricting graduate students who have been employed here for more than 10 terms from applying for re-appointment. "The University has argued that this is not an employment policy, but serves as an incentive to speed the educational process," GEO Bargaining Committee Chair Andrea Westlund said. "I don't think shortening the time to a degree is always beneficial, and this should be left up to depart- ments." Gamble said the University's team had not yet dis- cussed the two proposals. The University bargaining team also provided a counter-proposal to GEO's dental proposal, but health concerns have not yet been resolved. "We are asking for very little from the University on this issue," GEO chief negotiator Eric Odier-Fink said. "I've got my hopes up." Both sides said GEO's affirmative action proposals, presented last week, might prove more difficult to resolve, and Gamble said the University team is wait- ing to see the Joint Appointment Review Committee's report on these issues. The final version of the report is due out next week. The University team did present a substantive response to one of the four GEO affirmative action proposals, which thanked GEO for its support of University admissions policies, but said these policies had no place in the negotiations. "It is such a sensitive situation right now,' Gamble said. "It is not time to put it into a labor contract:' With unresolved concerns piling up, GEO members expressed dissatisfaction with. the progress so far. 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