2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 19, 2001 NATION/WORLD Mexico, U.S. anticipate energy problems SAN CRISTOBAL, Mexico (AP) - One country suffers blackouts and soaring energy costs. The other could likely face the same soon. As neighbors, it would seem Mexico and the United States have no choice but to work together to create a regional energy plan, helping each other provide enough power to fuel their growing economies. But the proposal for a common energy policy for the region stretching from Panama to Canada - put forth by President Bush and Mexican President Vicente Fox during their meeting here Friday - could face strong opposition in Mexico. The country's state-owned electricity commission has been a sacred symbol of Mexico's sovereignty. Past proposals to privatize or even allow more private invest- ment were widely called attempts to sell out Mexico. Late Saturday, a spokesman for the largest party in Mexico's Congress, the Institutional Revolutionary Party, expressed concern that Fox's commitments on energy might jeopardize Mexican sovereignty and said the party wanted to summon Foreign Secretary Jorge Castaneda to explain before lawmakers. Former President Ernesto Zedillo also tried, but failed, to privatize more of the energy market to over- come a growing need for power and to modernize a sluggish bureaucracy. Those funds and resources are still lacking in Mexico. The United States faces its own crisis. Blackouts left parts of California in the dark last month, and residents across the country have struggled to pay soaring energy bills. Bush has asked Mexico to help by allowing pri- vate U.S. capital to build electricity plants and trans- mission lines south of the border that would send power north. "We can conserve better; there's no question about it," Bush said Friday during a joint news conference with Fox. "But demand is far outstripping supply, which is creating a real problem for the working people of our respective countries. And so this sub- ject, rightly so, took quite a bit of time in our meet- ing, and it's going to take more time down the road." Fox has said Mexico can't meet its own energy needs, and won't be able to help the United States much in the near future. But, after rejecting privati- zation of the state-run energy commission, he sup- ported Bush's plan for a regional energy policy, calling ita "win-win situation for everyone." Yet he cautioned that the policy would have to benefit all those involved - not just use developing countries as sites to produce cheap electricity and lots of pollution. "We can conserve better; there's no question about it ." - President Bush "What is important is to have a common policy whereby no one takes advantage of the other," he said Friday. Still, Mexico needs the United States almost as much as its northern neighbor needs it. Energy plants on the Baja California peninsula south of San Diego can't keep up with demand, forcing offi- cials to import power from an already tight U.S. market. From Mexico City to small rural villages, many people simply pirate power from local lines. Those who hook up to the system legally face long lines to pay bills and a record-keeping system that's done largely on manual typewriters. On Friday, the two presidents discussed the possibil- ity of joint ventures to look for more energy resources within their borders. But, Bush said, the challenge will be transportation. NEWS IN WASHINGTON Clinton defense fails to appease many Former President Clinton gave his fullest defense yet of the Marc Rich pardon yeseterday but failed to silence critics who argue that political donations and connections helped the fugitive financier's cause. "I want every American to knew that, while you may disagree with this sion, I made it on the merits as I saw them, and I take full responsibility for it', Clinton wrote in an op-ed column in The New York Times. "The suggestion that I granted the pardons because Mr. Rich's former wife, Denise, made political contributions and contributed to the Clinton librry founda- tion is utterly false." Clinton also wrote that three well-known Republican lawyers who once repre- sented Rich "reviewed and advocated" the case for his pardon. All three denied that assertion. "I was astounded," one said. The former president's last-minute pardon of Rich, who has lived in Switzerland since fleeing a 1983 indictment on tax evasion and other charges, has prompted an investigation by federal prosecutors in New York and congressional hearings. Investigators want to know if Rich bought his pardon by passing money t s his ex-wife, Denise Rich, who has acknowledged making large contributions bT to Hillary Rodham Clinton's Senate race and to the presidential library. . LUCANE, Yugoslavia 3 Serb police officers die in van explosion An explosion ripped through a police van and killed three Serb officersjust outside Kosovo yesterday, heightening tensions already taut after a bus bombing that killed at least seven Serb civilians inside the troubled province. Yugoslavia blamed both attacks on Kosovo's ethnic Albanian militants, denied responsibility and said one of their commanders was killed by Serbpo lerycerday nLcae With violence mounting, Yugoslavia urged NATO to act immediately to keep the militants out of the buffer zone, which they have used to stage attacks on Ser- bian police and Yugoslav army troops. The militants want to join the zone with Kosovo as part of a push for indepen- dence for the Serbian province, which has been run by the United Nations and NATO-led peacekeepers since June 1999, when Yugoslavia halted its crackdown on the Albanian majority after a NATO bombing campaign. Friday's bombing of a bus carrying Serbs to visit the graves of relatives in Kosovo killed at least seven people and wounded 43, the deadliest attack in the province since 13 Serb farmers were machine-gunned to death while tillingtheir fields in July 19 hAG t LOOKING FOR AGREAT ,LEADERSHIP POSITION? GTDIVE INTO UAC! GET INVOLVED WITH THE LARGEST STUDENT-PROGRAMMING ORGANIZATION ON CAMPUS APPLY FOR EXECUTIVE BOARD POSITIONS: PRESIDENT VP FINANCE VP MARKETING VP PROGRAMMING VP EXTERNAL RELATIONS Applications are due Friday, Feb 23rd at 4:00 pm DOWNLOAD AN APPLICATION @ WWW.UMICH.EDUIAJAC All 4 Celebrate Kinko's Grand Opening in Ann Arbor. Tuesday, February 27, 2001 10:00 am - 7:00 pm Enjoy Special Prize Giveaways, Free Food, Drinks and Fun! Learn about Knko's products and services at our "Mini Trade Show" and enter to win great prizes! Report shows fish supply at low levels SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A worldwide netwo of no-fishing zones may be the last, best hope of replenish- ing the Earth's depleted stocks of fish and other marine species, an interna- tional team of scientists reports. Fish, lobster and other species recover in only a few years given sanc- tuaries free of the hooks and nets of commercial and sports fishermen, the researehers say. In a report released Saturday at the national meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, they urged creation of a net- work of marine parks where all sea ani- mals and plants would be protected. Just as national parks provide safe haven for threatened animals on land, marine parks could be the salvation for vanishing ocean life, the study said. "The oceans are more vulnerable than we realized," said Jane Lubhen- co, an Oregon State University marine scientist. "We know now that the pre- sent methods are inadequate to protect the oceans." Overfishing, pushed by a hungry -world's demand for seafood, has moved species of fish toward extinc- tion, the scientists said, and permanent marine parks may be the only answer to save them. "The seas are increasingly in serious trouble' said Stephen Palumbi of Har- vard University. He said dying coral reefs, toxic algal blooms, massive fish kills and the collapse of fisheries are symptoms of fundamental changes in ocean life that are caused, in part, by overfishing. In heavily exploited waters, the fish simply canot repopulate fast enough to keep up with the harvest. Marine parks would give them a chance, the scientists said. Food For Thought Who was the better fighter? In his book On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Killing in War and Society, Dr. David Grossman described the train- ing of the Vietnam-era soldier. Through mind conditioning exercises that none of them realized were taking place, they became possibly the best war- riors to ever take the field. With that though, came the founda- tion for PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder). More to come in future ads. Gary Lillie & Assoc., Realtors www.garylillie.om MEMBERS Financial Services Available to U of M'Credit Union Members Investment Asset Management Retirement Planning Financial Estate Planning College Funding Long Term Care Life Insurance 800-968-8628 Ext. 4226 Brad LabadieJRepresentative Locuted at U of M Credit Union 333 E. William Street Securities offered through CUNA Brokersge Services, Inc. Memnber NASD/SIPC. Insurance sold through licensed CUNA. Mutual Life Insurance Company Representatives. Not federally insured and not under- written or guaranteed by the credit union. SAN'A, Yemen 2 new suspects found in Cole bombing President Ali Abdullah Saleh said yesterday that two Yemenis were arrested in connection with the USS Cole bombing'in the past two days upon their return from Afghanistan. Saleh also reiterated in an interview with the Saudi-owned Middle East Broadcasting Corporation that there still is no evidence linking Saudi dissi- dent Osama bin Laden to the Oct. 12 suicide bombing that killed 17 U.S. sailors. "We cannot charge him (bin Laden) because we have no evidence against him. We don't have confessions that the suspects received instructions from bin Laden," he said. Saleh said the two Yemenis, Mohammed Ahmed al-Ahdal ands Ahmed Mohammed Amin, are heing interrogated. He did not give any other details on the arrests. LOS ANGELES Roger Clinton faces drunk driving charge Roger Clinton, the younger half- brother of former President Clin- ton, was arrested for investigation of drunken driving, police said yes- terday. Clinton was arrested early Satur- day after a police officer spotted him driving erratically through this oceanside town 18 miles south of Los Angeles, Officer Paul Wolcott said. The former president pardoned his half-brother less than a month ago, wiping out Roger Clinton's criminal record resulting from a 1985 guilty plea to a charge of con- spiracy to sell a single gram of cocaine for which he served more than a year in prison. Bill Clinton later described drug prosecution as "the best thing that ever happened" to his brother. STURBRIDGE, Mass. Police find car of Dartmouth killers A car driven by two teen-agers wanted in connection with the slays of two Dartmouth College profess s was found yesterday atla truck stop. The silver 1987 Audi with Vermont license plates was spotted by a state trooper maling a routitt patrol through a rear parking lot at the Sturbridge Isles truck stop about two miles from the Connecticut state line. It was covered with snow and authorities did not know how loi t had been there, State Police' . Ronald Sieberg said. Sturbridge got 1 to 2 inches of snow on Friday, the National Weather Service said. Robert Tulloch, 17, and James Parker, 16, both of Chelsea, Vt., were charged as adults with two counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of Half and Susanne Zantop, whose bodies were found in their home near the Dartmouth campus in Hanover, N.H., on Jan. 27. - Compiled from Daily wire rep#. WELCOME BOOTH WIN A PALM PILOT PERSONAL ORGANIZER Learn how Kinko's can help your business save time and be more productive. CREATIVE OPTIONS GET A FREE 8" X 10" ENLARGEMENT Learn about Kinko's photo quality prints. Bring a photo and receive a FREE 8" x 10" enlargement. LARGE FORMAT PRINTING ENTER OUR DRAWING TO WIN A FREE POSTER (UP TO 36"x48") Learn how you can make a huge impact with large format printing. 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