2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 6, 2000 NATION/WORLD Clinton to meet with Barak, Arafat JERUSALEM (AP) - Scattered clashes yesterday across the Gaza Strip and West Bank left two Pales- tinians dead, 17 injured and tensions high despite a truce agreement and plans for upcoming meetings in Washington. President Clinton, who has been try- ing to restore calm to the region, will play host to Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat on Thursday, and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak three days later, on Nov. 12, the White House said yes- terday. Both Palestinians killed yesterday were shot dead in the Gaza Strip. One Iwas Maher Mouhmad Alsaidi, a 16- dear-old boy hit in the head during a confrontation near the Al Bureij refugee camp, according to Shifa hos- pital director Mouawia Hassanian. At least 10 Palestinians were wounded in Gaza, and seven were hurt in the West Bank in a clash outside Bethlehem, to the south of Jerusalem, according to Palestinian security. In the West Bank, two Jewish set- tlers, a man and a woman, were wounded when Palestinian assailants ambushed their car and opened fire, settler spokesmen and the military said. In a plea for peace, tens of thou- sands of Israelis filled a Tel Aviv square on Saturday night to pay tribute to former prime minister Yitzhak Rabin, who was assassinated at the site five years ago by and ultranationalist Israeli opposed to trading land for peace with the Palestinians. The current violence has hardened attitudes on both sides and put seven years of peace negotiations on hold. Many dovish Israelis, including some of those at the rally, said their faith in the peace process has been shaken. Many Palestinians, mean- while, said they have little to show for the lengthy negotiations. Barak yesterday told his Cabinet that the large turnout was "an impres- sive and emotional demonstration" of the Israeli commitment to peace. In a speech at the Saturday rally, Barak warned Arafat that Israel "will not surrender to violence and we will defend our civilians and Israeli sol- diers everywhere." Arafat and his aides did not appear ready to tone down the rhetoric. The Palestinian leader met with families of the dead yesterday and his top aide, Tayeb Abdel Rahim, told the families: "The uprising will continue until we have an independent Pales- tinian state." The Israeli-Palestinian violence broke out more than five weeks ago, claiming 170 lives - the vast majority Palestinian - in the worst bloodshed since peace talks began in 1993. Arafat, in an interview with CBS, said a proposed Israeli peace settle- mnent in July fell far short of the mini- "If I betray, no doubt, one will come to kill me." - Yasser Arafat Palestinian leader mum Palestinian demands. Arafat said security attempting to prevent (rioters) that if he had accepted, it would have from reaching friction points," Brig. been a betrayal of Muslims and would Gen. Yair Naveh, the commander of likely have led to his assassination by Israeli forces in Gaza, told army radio. Palestinian militants. But there was still much work to do, "If I will betray, no doubt, one will he said. come to kill me," Arafat said in an The violence has shown some signs interview with "60 Minutes" that aired of abating since the Israelis and Pales- last night. tinians reached the truce. The sessions The Palestinians say the Sept. 28 in Washington would give Clinton visit by hawkish Israeli politician Ariel another chance to promote a settle- Sharon to a disputed Jerusalem site ment. holy to both Jews and Arabs was the Israeli elder statesman Shimon spark that ignited the bloodshed. Peres, who negotiated the current Arafat told "60 Minutes" that he cease-fire agreement with Arafat, said had appealed befolrehand to Clinton, the Palestinian leader was attempting the European Union, the Vatican and to stop the violence, "but there's Barak himself not to allow Sharon to nobody who can control the situation, visit the Temple Mount, or Haram es- which is basically psychological," he Sharif. No comment on the claim was said. immediately available. Also yesterday, Saudi Arabia donat- Arafat has accused Israel of not ed S30 million to the Palestinian abiding by the cease-fire deal reached Authority to help after Israel closed last Thursday and has said he wanted the Palestinian areas a month ago amid the United States to pressure Israel to the violence, preventing workers from comply. entering Israel. Israeli officials accused Arafat of The closure has cost Palestinians moving slowly. S870 million, according to official "We see the Palestinian police and Palestinian estimates. THE RALLIES Continued from Page 1A M IcHIGAN Bush received an endorsement during his rally from Michigan Teamsters Local 337 President Larry Brennan, D A who broke with other Michigan Team- sters, who have endorsed Gore. The Bush campaign has been target- ing organized labor, a traditionally YOU CAN'T Democratic group, throughout the cam- paign." For the last eight years, many BEAT US, union members have supported an administration that has not supported BUT YOU CAN us" Brennan said "To have him on my side is not only a JOIN US. major plus, it must be sending a chilling signal to out opponents," Bush said. Cheney also recognized the impor- lance of Btennais's endorsment but CALL 76-DAILY focused primtaily on the condition of the U.S. military. O FIND OUT "There is no more solemn tesponsi bilitythan thse responstbtltty of cotUs HOVE. matsder-in-clsief'"Chseisey said. Powell said there are still masiydsay le'iges to be faced its the msilitary, inscludingg'etieral ansd sisldier iretenstiont rate's. 'The greatest trauls is to speak thi. truth and there are problenss its the U.S. military," Powell said. "On Tuesdasy we're going to have a new president. A president we can be proud of." HAVING PROBLEMS with SPRINT PCS in ANN ARBOR? Contact attorney Bill Stern at bstern1213@aol.com Syt h u're pregnant ~aius~.~w lsten, we care. PROBEM RNANcV HELP 97543*5-7 Any time.. any day, 24 hours. FI nfull ± tla ^CROSS THE NATION High court to hear environmental case WASHINGTON - As Americans go to the polls tomorrow, the Supreme' Court will take up an unusually important clean air case that could crimpshe federal government's power to combat pollution for several years. As an environmental dispute, the case sounds familiar. Business groups representing truckers, power plant operators and car dal are chafing at the strict air-quality standards announced three years ago by t Clinton administration's Environmental Protection Agency. If put into effect, these rules limiting smog and soot would cost businesses more than S46 billion a year, industry leaders argue. Defending the rules, EPA officials and environmentalists say that 125 million Americans will breathe cleaner air if mandatory controls are added in scores of communities. Equally important, an estimated 350,000 children will not contract asthma and other lung ailments, they say. But the Election Day argument in the high court is less about clean air than about who makes the laws. Its timing is coincidental. Certainly, voters set the general direction for the government by electing a president and members of Congress. Together, legislators and the chief executid make the laws. But the precise rules and regulations that give a law its force a0 often decided many years later and largely by nonelected agency officials or judges. Pesticide debilitates of developing Parkinson's;' se'' William Langston, director of the Parkinson's ailments Parkinson's Institute in Sunnyvaje, Ca., who was not involved in the New research using rats suggests study. "It is not direct evidence that that long-term exposure to a widely rotenone causes Parkinson's. The used pesticide kills brain cells and whole puzzle hasnt come togetii triggers debilitating physical symp- er. toms associated with Parkinson's dis- ease. Scientists say the experiment's C intonvetoes 200 results strongly indicate what scien- tists have suspected for several years- that the most common form of WASHINGTON - President Cin- Parkinson's disease might result from ton has killed a controversial povi- toxins in the environment. sion that would have made it easier to The new study, published in the prosecute government officials, fr December issue of Nature Neuro- leaking classified informationlb science, does not prove that the pesti- vetoing the fiscal 210 1 intelligen cide used in the test, rotenone, causes authorization bill that contained the Parkinson's in humans. measure. But scientists who reviewed the While voicing support for the experiment said the results are power- need to strengthen the law to ful and should reinvigorate the search "deter unauthorized disclosures" for environmental toxins that may the president said in a statement contribute to Parkinson's, the most Saturday that the language intihe common neurological disorder after bill was "overbroad and may Alzheimer's. unnecessarily chill legitimate "This is more evidence that a class activities that are at the heart ofE of compounds may increase the risk democracy." AROUND TH E WORLD 2 assen er flights Jordan, an and Tunisia to escape bombing during the 1991 Gulf War. defy no- y zone They remain abroad. Passengers aboard the inaugur BAGHDAD. rig Iraq seint flights included officials and journh dhoisestic passeisgei flights carry ing iss who returned with ie plane lt 156 people itoa skies pastolled by Baghdad. "Thousands of people hits) U.S. ae British swarplameD esteidai, gathseredl to welcome the planei'sds the first challenge of its kind to the arrisal in Basra and Mosul, accorditig no-fly zones that Iraq considers to INA. infringements on its sovereignty. Two planes left Baghdad at I p.m. bound for Basra in the southern no-flyvr zone and Mosul in the northern zone, could be restored the official Iraqi News Agency report- ed. They returned safely to Baghdad BELGRADE, Yugoslavia - about four hours later, the agency Yugoslavia could patch up diplomatic said. relations with the United States and Iraq, which says the flights mark major European powers in a week or the resumption of regular passenger two and start cooperating with the U.N. service to the cities, used converted War Crimes tribunal, the country's new Russian-made military cargo planes foreign minister said yesterday."It's ony for the flights - an Antonov with 42 normal that we have close cooperation passengers to Mosul and an Ilyushi with the United States, with Russia." with I 14 passengers to Basra. Foreign Minister Goran Svilanovic told The resumption of the flights, the Beta news agency, one day after the which Iraq announced on Oct. 30, new government was inaugurated. came nearly a decade after Iraq's fleet of 15 Boeing airliners was moved to - Compiledfios Dailr tire reports. The Mchlgan Daily (ISSN 0745967) is pubibshed Monday through Friday durng the falt and w nter termsy suetsatthi verityoi chi gan. Subscritonsp follltem. staringeins e be s. . ailare 5500. Wisserem(Janusarly thohil priis $05 , yelarlonig(Sseptiemiber through Apil s IS$580.On-campsS ssci pins o r fallterei$35. bsciptions must be piepasd. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Colegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daly, 420 Maynard l., Ann Arbor Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY: Arts 763-0379: Sports 647-3336: Opinion 764-0552: Circulation 764-0558: Classified advertising 764-0557: Display advertising 764-0554: Biling 7640550. E mail letters to the editor to daily.lettersLsumichedu. World Wide Web: www.michigandaily.com. NEWS Jewel Gopwani, Managing Editor EDITORS: Nick Sunkley, Michael Grass, Nika Schulte, Jaimie Winkler STAFF: Lindsey Alper t. Kristen Beaumont. A nna Clark. Laura Deneau. Lizzie Eirde. 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