2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 4, 2000 NATION/ WORLD Barak, rafat to meet i Pars JERUSALEM (AP) -- Palestinian gunmen bat- tied Israeli soldiers yesteray at isolated army posts in the West Bank and Gaza Strip that have degener- ated into virtual free-fire zones, as both sides defied a cease-fire call on the eve of a U.S. attempt to sal- vage peacemaking. Yesterday's death toll of five was the lowest since the fighting began last week. In addition, 206 people were injured, according to the Palestinians. Overall, 56 people have died and at least 1,300 have been wounded, the vast majority Palestinian. "The results have been very painful," Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak said, adding that he had called on Israel's security forces "to make a supreme effort to prevent further casualties." Barak and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat head to Paris today in hopes that Secretary of State Mad- eleine Albright can help end the fighting and revive peace talks. The two also have agreed to meet in Egypt with President Hosni Mubarak tomorrow. Barak, meanwhile, was battling for political sur- vival at home, trying to appease Arab legislators who are threatening to topple his government over the harsh crackdown on rioters in Israel's Arab towns. The internal rebellion, the worst since Israel's found- ing 52 years ago, has blocked highways and closed schools, paralyzing large parts of northern Israel. With the Israelis blasting away with heavy weap- ons, such as rockets launched from helicopters, and with the Palestinians routinely firing automatic rifles, the intensity of the fighting sometimes resem- bles a war and has surpassed levels seen during the 1987-93 Palestinian uprising and three days of fire- fights in 1996. "I have been dealing with such riots since 1987 and ... there has never been anything on this level - not when it comes to clashes and certainly not when it comes to the use of weapons," said Yisrael Yitzhak, commander of Israel's paramilitary border police in the West Bank. The heaviest clashes yesterday were again in the chaotic West Bank and Gaza Strip, where a hastily arranged cease-fire quickly unraveled at a pair of chronic trouble spots. Palestinian television broadcast an appeal in Hebrew to Israeli soldiers not to open fire, and a senior Palestinian official said an international inquiry into Israel's actions would be a condition of reviving the peace talks. "We think that the Israeli crimes committed against our people attacked the heart of the peace process," said Nabil Abourdeneh, a top aide to Arafat. But Barak's office said he "totally rejected the call for an international investigation." At one point late yesterday, the Paris talks were almost called off, after Palestinian negotiator Nabil Shaath reportedly said Arafat had no intention of meeting with Barak in Paris. Barak informed the Americans that in this case, he would not go to Paris, the prime minister's office said. The prime minister only relented after he was informed by U.S. mediators that Arafat was ready to see Barak, the statement said. Arafat spokesman Nabil Abourdeneh has said that for now the Pales- tinian leader only planned to meet separately with Albright, but that a three-way session - Arafat- Barak-Albright - was possible. Israeli troops, backed by a helicopter gunship, traded gunfire with Palestinians at an army outpost near the remote Jewish settlement of Netzarim in the Gaza Strip, part of an on-and-off battle that's been running for days. Palestinian rock throwers dropped face-down in the streets, seeking cover amid sustained blasts of automatic rifle fire. Shortly afterward, wailing ambulances arrived to take away the casualties. One man's head was mutilated by an Israeli rocket, and his fellow Palestinians picked up parts of his brain and waved their bloodstained hands in the air. In the West Bank town of Nablus, besieged Israeli forces also called in helicopter fire to drive back Palestinians shooting on the tiny Israeli enclave of Joseph's Tomb. After an emotional funeral for a 15-year-old Pal- estinian boy, Palestinians headed directly to the Israeli outpost. Several gunmen dashed to the edge of the compound and raised their rifles to shoot over the stone wall surrounding the tomb. Youths relied on'black smoke from burning tires to provide cover as they darted toward. the wall and hurled firebombs toward the tomb, believed by some to hold the remains of the biblical patriarch. Supreme Court looks at drug roadblocks WASHINGTON - A new tactic being used by police to wage the war on drugs - stopping cars and circling them with dogs that can sniff for narcotics - is in serious constitutional doubt. But yesterday, the Supreme Court did little to clear it up. For the first half of a lively one-hour hearing, drug roadblocks appeared to be doomed. Justices criticized the tactic, raising the possibility that police would turn next to stopping pedestrians and subjecting them to canine inspection. * But the second half-hour was a different story: The new technique abruptly seemed to regain constitutional respectability. Justice after justice suggested that if the police first asked to see a driver's license and registration, then the dog sniff might pose no constitutional problem. For police and motorists, these were only preliminary signs of the court's lean- ing. The justices will debate the issue at length and in private over the next few months, thendecide. But yesterday's public discussion made it appear that a final ruling won't come easy. Police in Indianapolis, determined "to interrupt the flow of illegal narcotics through Indianapolis," began using drug roadblocks two years ago. The city ran six such roadblocks before motorists who had been stopped challenged tr constitutionality. Clinton proposes efficient appliances WASHINGTON -Afterasummer of brownouts, the Clinton administra- tion proposed efficiency standards yes- terday that would require new home central air conditioners and heat pumps to use 20 to 30 percent less electricity. The increased cost of the improve- ments - $274 more for the air units and $486 for a typical heat pump - would be more than offset by con- sumers' electricity savings over time, Energy Department officials said. "By reducing electricity costs we are helping consumers save money," said Energy Secretary Bill Richardson, who announced the proposal that is expected to be finalized later this year. He said the new standards - along with more stringent efficiency require- ments for four other appliances already announced or about to be proposed - will also ease the threat of summer brownouts and help cut pollution linked to climate change. - Separately, the department will pro- Milosevic wants opposition arrested BELGRADE, Yugoslavia - Esca- lating the Yugoslav crisis, President Slobodan Milosevic's government yes- terday ordered the arrest of leaders of one of the strikes launched to drive him from power. The announcement by the Belgrade prosecutor followed a government statement warning of "special mea- sures" against those responsible for the wave of strikes and blockades called to force Milosevic to accept defeat in Sept. 24 elections. The arrest order raised fears that Milosevic may resort to the army and police to hold on to power, despite calls at home and abroad. for him to step down in favor of challenger Vojislav Kostunica. The opposition showed no signs of backing down and has called on Yugo- slavs to come to Belgrade on Thurs- day for a final push to drive Milosevic from power. Strikes spread to a key copper mine, and 50.000 demonstrators took to the pose this week that clothes washers be required to use 35 percent less water and energy beginning in 2007. These high-efficiency washers are expected to cost $240 more than today's washers, but the additional cost is expected to be recouped in seven years through energy and water sav- ings, the department estimated. Massive amounts of spandex heisted LOS ANGELES - The masked intruders burst into Ace Knitting Co. just before II p.m. They stuck a pistol to the head of the lone employee, bound his wrists with shoelaces, then sped away with a truckload of booty. The target of their carefully wo* scheme - Bolts of spandex fabric. Armed gangs have stolen more than $2 million worth of the springy yarn and fabric from downtown textile mills over the last year, police say, making Los Angeles the city with the greatest amount of spandex fabric banditry. streets in Yugoslavia's two largest cities - 20,000 in Belgrade and 30,000 in Novi Sad, while barricades were up around the central town of Cacak. In the capital, an estimated 20,000 people chanting "the police are with us" marched toward Milosevic's resi- dence. Hundreds of riot police tui them away without incident. Unifacation festival marred by bombing DRESDEN, Germany - Germany celebrated 10 years as one nation yes- terday in a city rebuilding symbols of its pre-World War I splendor, but a bombing darkened the festive moo After a summer marked by reW- gent neo-Nazi violence, the firebomb- ing of a synagogue in Duesseldorf, nearly 500 miles to the west, lent new urgency to concerns about the ugly side of united Germany. Police said unknown assailants tossed as many as three Molotov cock- tails at the synagogue's front doorjust before midnight Monday. - Compiledfivon Daily wire rep- s ctipnpOC8 u A Leader in World Class Eye Care sdCor tignproe 47 Contact the U-M Kellogg Eye Center at (734) 615-6914 -d A young Chinese woman seeks, at various times, family security, sexual freedom, and intellectual and spiritual growth. The story, which takes her from Shanghai to Xi'an, Hong Kong and California in the 1980s, illustrates a new generation of vigorous and confident Chinese women. LOVE ACROSS THE PACIFIC (ISBN 0-595-09462-7) is published by Writer's. Showcase, presented by Writer's Digest. It is available through web sites, such as Amazon.com, or bookstores. Robert Wen is Professor Emeritus of Michigan State University. "...an excellent novel...it is very interesting, even for the romantic story."- Nelson Edmonson, professor emeritus of art history, MSU. 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