2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 14, 2000 NATION/WORLD Car bomb klls in Indonesia garage -ATION S JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - A car bomb tore through a packed parking garage beneath Jakarta's stock exchange yesterday, killing at least 13 people, injuring 27 and shaking confidence in Indonesia's attempts to reform after decades of corrupt dictatorship. The blast damaged or destroyed 400 vehicles in the garage filled with cars and drivers waiting for stock- hrokers to finish work, said national police chief Gen. Rusdihardjo. The 27 injured - many covered in black dust and breathing with diffi- culty, and others cut by flying glass - were brought into a nearby hospi- tal. Smoke filled the exchange's trad- ing room and other offices, forcing the evacuation of about 1,000 work- ers. Firefighters doused the flames and fumbled through the darkness of the LANDLORDS Continued from Page:IA Lewis said. three-level parking lot to pull out victims many hours after the blast. Most of the dead suffocated; sotne were found in the charred remains of their cars. No one claimed responsibility for the blast, the deadliest in a series of unexplained recent bombings in Indonesia. The bombing was a major blow to efforts by President Abdurrahman Walid to restore con- fidence in Indonesia's crisis-ridden economy and end violence across the world's fourth-most populous nation. In the past, Wahid has complained bitterly that his opponeiits have used terrorist-like tactics to destabilize his year-old reformist government. The attack occurred without warn- ing 45 minutes before the markets closed. Hours before the afternoon explosion, the stock market's main index hit a 12-month low. After the blast, trading was suspended until Monday. Rusdihardjo, who like many Indonesians uses one name, said the explosion originated in a red car parked on the second level of the garage. Jakarta police spokesman Lt. Col. Nur Usman said authorities were try- ing to determine what explosive was used. "It could be a grenade, a bomb, or something electrical," he said. The state news agency Antara said the bomb was planted in a Toyota van. "It was a really big bang and the earth shook. Then we just ran for our lives," said Rudi Herawanto, a driver who was on the first' level, a floor above where the blast went off. Others in the building recalled the force of the blast. "We were on the 27th floor and it shook substantially," said Greg McCoy, an Australian insurance bro- ker. Feri Indrianto, a stockbroker on the 20th floor, said: "I felt a big blast and heard a loud bang." Mysterious explosions have coin- cided with every major stage of a state investigation into allegations-of corruption by former dictator Suhar- to, who ruled Indonesia for 32 years until'forced out by violent demon- strations in 1998. A bomb exploded just before Suharto's case went before a court two weeks ago. The proceedings are scheduled to resume today, when doctors will be asked whether the former leader is fit for trial. On Aug. 1, a bomb exploded out- side the residence of Philippine Ambassador Leonides Caday, killing two people and injuring dozens, including the envoy. Lee set free with apology from judge ALBUQE IRQIlI N.M. Nine ionths after lie was branded a threat to national security and put in solitary confinement, Wel Ho Lee was set free yes- terday with an apology from a judge who said the government's actions "embar- rassed our entire nation." Supporters cheered as a smiling Lee left the courthouse alongside his family. lie thanked them and said, "I'm very happy to go home with my wife and chil dren today." With a chuckle, he added: "The next few days, I'm going fishing." Lee pleaded guilty to a single count of mishandling nuclear secrets as the gov- ernment all but abandoned its crumbling case against the former Los Alamos scientist. Under the terms of the plea bargain, lie was sentenced to 278 days - essen- tially the time served since his arrest last December. Lee had been charged with 59 counts of breaching national security and faced life in prison ifconvicted. Fifty-eight of those counts were dropped. "I sincerely apologize to you, Dr. Lee, for the unfair manner in which you were held in custody by the executive branch," U.S. District Judge James Parker said. Parker said the Departments of Justice and Energy "have embarrassed our entire nation and each of us who is a citizen of it. But Lewis said that sotne problems arise because students do not thoroughly read their leases. "Frequently we see problems because tenants don't read their leases before they sign them' Lewis said. "There are a lot of issues covered in the lease, the obligations placed on,the tenant and what land- lords have to do and what they can't do." Although Lewis said that students are always enti- tIed to a copy of their lease, School of Music juiior Allison Soranno said that she was denied a copy of her lease, something she will need for her upcomning legal battle with Allmand Properties. Soranno and her roommate were summoned to court by their landlord yesterday for withholding rent for the month of August. Soranno claims that when she signed the lease for apartment 5 in her East Kingsley Street property, she was told that she could move in during August. But shen she called in July, she was told the apartment was being renovated and she would instead have to live in apartment 6 instead. "They never called us to say they planned to reno- vate number 5, they just assumed that it would be okay with Lis, Soranno said. When Soranno complained to the landlord, he offered her the newly renovated apartment 3, which she accepted on the condition that he send her written updates on the apartment and its new furnishings. When she had not received the update two weeks later, she withheld her rent finom the landlord. "lie thinks that no college student will stand tip to him, it's like we're here and we're stuck. But we made a stand and fought against him and now he's still refusing to give us a copy of our lease," Soranno said. Allmand Properties could not be reached for com- ment. Lewis said that not only should students receive a copy of the lease at signing but per city ordinance, should also receive a copy of the Tenants Rights Handbook a book which outlines what to do when faced with problems such as Soranno's. "Most leases should say that the tenant has received a copy of the handbook," Lewis said. The handbook not only states the responsibilities of landlords, but also the responsibilities of tenants. "I think that incoming students lots of times don't know or understand what renting property is about," said Steve Welch, president of Anti Arbor Realty. "Some frustration comes from having other people do things for them and now that they're on their own, they don't know how to do them." [lan Jones, an Ann Arbor landlord who owns almost a dozen properties rented to students, agreed swith Welch. "I wish my tenants would read the lease before they move in so that they know the expectations and their rights." Jones said. "Some students may lack experience with dealing with housing. I've had students call to have me change a light- bulb. They are not overly demanding, they are just younger." House asses hate Crimes gslation WASHINGTON - 'The house voted by a surprisingly wide mar- gin yesterday in favor of hate- crime legislation that would protect gays as wel Il as other target.ced groups. 'he vote now means that a solid majority in both chambers has advocated expanding federal juris- dict isnito include violent crimes committed on the basis of race reli- gi on, colir, re igiot, sexual orienta- tion, gender, ethnicity or disability. forty-one Republicans joined 191 Democrats in supporting the motion, which instructed House negotiators to accept language attached to the annual Defense Department authorization bill. President Clinton has told con- gressional leaders he is determined to enact h ate-c rime lelisl at issi before his leaves office. Human Rights Campaign executive direc- or Elizabeth Birch said yesterday's vote, coupled with the Senate's 57 to 42 vote in June, would boost the measure's chance of passage. "We feel very triumphant," Birch said yesterday. J.P. Morgan, Chase Manhattan merge NEW YORK - Banking power- houses Chase Manhattan and J.P Morgan agreed to a S35.2 billion merger yesterday in a deal that demonstrates how venerable institd- tions are joining forces to meet the challenges of an increasingly global economy. 'he new company, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., will not only combine the immense assets of both compa- nies, it will also unite the formidable histories of both institutions, whose forebears include J.P. Morgan, Alexander Hamiltos and David Rock- efeller. READ THE DAILY ONLINE AT WWW.THEMICHIGANDAILY.COM ei' MERCER Management Consulting University of Michigan Resume Deadline: September 15, 2000 (Non BBA students) September 28, 2000 (BBA Students) Please submit resume to: Ms. Cory A. Lynch Analyst Recruiting Coordinator Mercer Management Consulting 2300 N Street, NW, Suite 800 Washington, DC 20037 Phone: 800-235-7996 ext. 7489 Fax: 202-293- 371 Italians protest death sentence in Virginia ROME- Backed by appeals from Pope John Paul II and.the European Union, Italy has unleashed a barrage of e-mails and official protests against thesched- uled execution today of an Italian- American convicted of murder in Vimrginia. The apparently futile campaign on behalf of Derek Rocco Barnabei, which is to culminate here with a nationally televised vigil counting down what are expected to be the final four hours of his life, has rallied much of this nation in defense of an emi- grant's grandson. Other European countries, increas- ingly vocal critits of capital punish- ment, have joined the effort out off dismay that the united States is one of the few democracies still imposing the death penalty. In a tent outside the Roman Colosseum here this week,' Italians lined up to send computer mes- sagestsking Virginia Gov. Jaimes Gilmore to spare the 33-year-old Barnabei from lethal injection. Tens of thousands of e-mails from ordinary Italians and celebrities have reinforced appeals by Presi- dent Carlo Azeglio Ciampi and every party in Parliament. 737 crashes in Indian village, 60 killed PATNA, India - An Alliance Air plane crashed into houses while making a second attempt to land at an airport in eastern India, killing nearly 60 people on beard and on the ground. Thousands of people mobbe around the smoldering wreckage p twisted metal and rubble, pulling out the dead and survivors, after the Boe- ing 737-200 smashed into two hougs in a complex just over a utile fro'n Patna airport. Within hours, the bodies of 39 dead, most burned beyond recogris- tion, had beet: removed. - Cosspil'uiiasm DuilV usiepor's. 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