2 - The Michigan Daily -- Friday, November 10, 2000 NATION/WORLD .1 Clinton holds meeting with Arafat I AcROSS THE NATiON 1 Pr- v, WASHINGTON (AP) - Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat said yesterday he would be willing to attend another Middle East summit, with President Clinton as host, provided it was well-prepared "to ensure its success." "This is why I am here," Arafat said after a two- hour meeting with Clinton at the White House and a news conference in which he denounced Israel as the cause of violence that has shattered already enfee- bled peace talks. "I would welcome any effort to convene another summit, provided we prepare for it and ensure its success," Arafat said later at a question-and-answer session sponsored by the Council on Foreign Rela- tions. He stressed the agenda must include Jerusalem's future and Palestinian refugees, issues that he said cannot be deferred. Implying Clinton would push the idea Sunday when he meets at the White House with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, the Palestinian leader said "President Clinton has promised to exert maxi- mum effort" in the time he has left in office. A July summit at the president's Camp David mountain retreat collapsed over Arafat's demand for sovereignty over east Jerusalem. Barak offered some local control to the Palestinians in parts of the Old City, which was ruled by Jordan for 19 years until it was captured by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War and united with the rest of tne city. Arafat responded testily to queries about Palestin- I would welcome any effort to convene another summit, provided we prepare for it and ensure its success" - Yasser Arafat Palestinian leader ian children being part of the confrontation with Israel. Questioned about the children by an official of the pro-Israel lobby, American-Israel Public Affairs Committee, Arafat shouted: "Someone from APACE should have apologized for killing Palestin- ian children." When the moderator, Frank Sense, of CNN, asked whether Palestinian children should be withdrawn from confrontation, Arafat stood up and sputtered: "I can't permit you to speak to me in that language." Earlier, after shaking hands with Clinton and saluting him as he left, Arafat told reporters on the White House's rain-swept. driveway that he reaf- firmed his commitment to making peace, and the outcome depends on the efforts exerted by Clinton. The White House gave no indication that any ground was gained toward a firm truce or the more remote goal of reopening negotiations between the Palestinians and Israelis. In fact, administration officials abandoned the phrase "peace process" and replaced it with "politi- cal process." A White House spokesman, P.J. Crowley, would not say whether Clinton asked Arafat for a public demand that Palestinian protesters stop their rock- throwing campaign against Israelis. But, Crowley said, "Clear statements by both lead- ers can only help." "We continue to be frustrated," Crowley told reporters. Arafat was defiant in his own exchange with reporters earlier. Thrusting at Israel, he said: "I am not the one who initiated the violence. I am not the one who is attacking Israelis. My tanks are not sieg- ing Israeli towns. I did not order my tanks, my air force, my artillery, my heavy weapons, my navy." He interrupted his interpreter to make sure his English was conveyed as he wished. "We are facing a very dangerous situation that is really hindering the peace process," he said. "We are a nation with one airplane, Arafat said as he left. Gunman surrenders after 17 hours CONWAY, S.C. - A Virginia stockbroker accused of killing his former boss surrendered yesterday after holing up in his parents' rural house and keeping police at bay for more than 17 hours. Joseph Ludlam walked out with his hands in the air shortly after police cu power to the house at dusk, Horry County Police Chief Paul Goward said. Ludlam was served a Virginia murder warrant before he was taken to t1a Horry County jail. An extradition hearing was pending. Ludlam allegedly walked into a First Union Securities office in Norfolk, Va., on Tuesday, fatally shot Timothy O'Shaughnessy and then fled in the other man's car. Ludlam was fired a month ago, reportedly because of discrepancies in his accounts and aggressive trading practices. A First Union spokesman has con- firmed only that Ludlam was a former employee. Police surrounded the ranch-style house late Wednesday after being tippe that Ludlam was inside. Police said they did not know how long Ludlam had been in the house before his parents, thinking he was asleep, sneaked out. It was not immediately clear if they called authorities. Ludlam refused to take police phone calls during the standoff but finally spo with his brother and wife. At one point, he walked out the back door and fire shotgun blast into the ground, Goward said. $1.1 Billion Hedge Fund Analyst Position Groundbreaking set for WWII memorial WASHINGTON - A memorial to one of history's greatest crusades -- World War II - will get its official start tomorrow, when President Clinton and other dignitaries turn a few shovels of dirt on a small patch of land between the Lincoln Memorial and the Wash- ington Monument. The50"0million marble memorial, two arches connected by low walls and wrapped around a pool and fountains, has been 13 years in the making and will honor the 16 million men and women who served during the war, the 406,000 killed and the millions who supported the war from home. Besides Clinton, those taking part tomorrow - Veteran's Day - include former Sen. Bob Dole, chairman of the National World War II Memorial cam- paign, who was seriously wounded as an Army infantry captain fighting in Italy during the war. Also participating will be actor Tom Hanks, who por- trayed an Army infantry captain during and after D-Day in the movie "Saving Private Ryan." Retired Army Gen. Colin Powell, former chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, and Defense Secretary William Cohen are also scheduled to appear at the ceremony, which is expected to draw thousands of World War II veter- ans from around the country. Rapist, murderer executed in Texas HUNTSVILLE, Texas -- A Mexi- can-born killer was executed by injec- tion yesterday amid protests from foreign countries that say he was denied his right under an international treaty to contact the Mexican consulate after hi arrest. About five hours before Miguel Flores was strapped to a chamber gurney for the execution, the U.S. Supreme Court, in a 5-4 vote, denied his request for a reprieve. Flores was condemned to die for abducting, raping and stabbing to death 20-year-old Angela Marie Tyson as she left her summer job at a video store in 1989. Job Responsibilities: valuation analysis, meeting with management teams and research analysts, investment idea origination Requirements: solid academic background, detail oriented, ability to work under pressure, strong interest in equity markets K Capital, based in Boston, is a value oriented, special situation fund that invests opportunistically in European and U.S. securities on a long and short basis. Investment strategy is focused on restructurings, liquidations, and various types of arbitrage. K Capital was formed in April 1999 and has returned 93% since inception. Please submit cover letter and resume by November 17 to Anup Khandelwal via email at recruitingqkcapitalpartners.com. Please include "Analyst Position" as the email subject. *1.4 Kuwaiti police arrest 3 bombing suspects Tanzania. Bin Laden is also a prime suspect as the mentor of last month' suicide boat-bomb attack on the USS Cole in Aden Harbor. £tXMENJTA.Y CH/U,.DPK.NJ IN tLOv-hNfCOME AREAS AR~E PEADinfc T~ c GADES BEHinfD TrHEP S RBA PEERS Liz. Dw~YE PCHIND. (n b) TH IP- G Rrkp AE . 'THC YEAR- THtAT iP ()NJE YEAR.~, Gf- s CAUGHT THEM ViP ^ND PVT THEM KUWAIT -Police yesterday A Yemeni source close to the Co announced the arrests of three investigation said yesterday that f. Kuwaitis and seizure of a large quanti- "major players" in the attack that kill ty of explosives in an alleged plot that 17 American sailors had fled Yemen. a local newspaper said was directed at U.S. targets in other countries. Turkey accepts EU The newspaper, Al-Qabas, said the arrested men had links to terror master- membership rules mind Osama bin Laden, Islamic funda- mentalist scion of a millionaire Saudi ANKARA. Turkey - The govern- family with ancestral roots in Yemen. ment announced yesterday that it has A fourth suspect was still at large, accepted in principle the Europe the Kuwaiti Interior Ministry said. Union's conditions for launching me - The ministry's statement described bership negotiations, but it lashed out at him as "a citizen of a North African EU demands that it solve its dispute country" -- an Arab swath that with Greece over the divided Mediter stretches from Morocco through ranean island of Cyprus. Tunisia, Algeria and Libya to Egypt. "The Cyprus problem concerns pri- The Ministry said he has been using a marily the two sides on ,the island. forged passport from an unidentified Turkey has always kept its EU candidai Gulf nation. cy and the Cyprus issue apart," govern- The United States has blamed bin ment spokesman Sukru Sina Gurel Laden, who is thought to be holed up said. in Afghanistan, for the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and - Compiledfiomn Daily iiire repwOr The Mich gan Daily (ISSN 0745 967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter termsb students at he University of Michigan. Subscriptions for s n September via U.S. mail are $100. Winter term (January through April) is $105. yearlong (September through April) is $180. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily. 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor. Michigan 48109-1327. 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