2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 14, 2001 NATION/WORLD Official tried to abort Kuwait bomb NEWS IN BRIEF: / r: ' , '. :i f' a i >_I WASHINGTON (AP) - A US. serviceman at the scene of the accidental bombing in Kuwait cleared the F/A-18 Hornet pilot to release his bombs and then tried belatedly to abort the training strike, U.S. offi- cials said yesterday. It appeared that two of three released bombs hit near the serviceman's observation post, Rear Adm. Craig Quigley said yesterday. Quigley, speaking for the Pentagon, would not otherwise confirm the sequence of events. Five American servicemen and a New Zealand Army major were killed in the bombing Monday; three Americans were seriously injured. Air Force Staff Sgt. Jason Faley, a tactical air con- troller with the 19th Air Support Operations Squadron based at Fort Campbell, Ky., was identified as one of the dead. The four other Americans killed were mem- bers of the Army. They were identified yesterday as Staff Sgt. Troy Westberg of Wisconsin, Staff Sgt. Richard Boudreau of Florida, Sgt. Phillip Freligh of Nevada and Spc. Jason Wildfong of West Virginia. Their home towns were not provided. Acting Army Maj. John McNutt was identified as the New Zealander killed. Many details remained unclear. But officials speak- ing on condition of anonymity yesterday said the for- ward air controller gave the pilot clearance to launch his weapons and the three bombs were dropped. Help Catherine & Glen Intersection Ann Arbor Many accidents have occurred at this dangerous intersection. We would like to contact others who have lodged a complaint with the City of Ann Arbor, either written or verbal, regarding this intersection prior to September 11, 2000. If you have made such a com- plaint, or if you know someone who has, please call: (248) 443-9662 and leave your name and telephone number or email at MStone476@hotmail.com. Arab League gives Palestinians loan The Washington Post CAIRO, Egypt - Jarred by reports that the Palestinian Authority risks financial collapse, Arab diplomats have agreed their governments will provide $40 million a month to ensure that Yasser Arafat's administration can pay workers and reduce Israel's eco- nomic pressure in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, the Arab League announced yesterday. The recommendation for subsidies was made by Arab foreign ministers meeting here late Monday in prepara- tion for an Arab summit scheduled March 27-28 in Amman, Jordan, Arab League Secretary General Esmat Abdel-Meguid told reporters. It fol- lowed Palestinian complaints that Arafat's administration has seen little of the $1 billion in aid promised by Arab governments last October to support the Palestinian uprising against Israel. Since that pledge, Arab govern- ments have contributed funds to the Islamic Development Bank earmarked for the Palestinians, but have failed to come up with rules for using the money in the West Bank and Gaza. With $230 million on deposit ostensi- bly to support the Palestinian cause, the Palestinian Authority still was unable to pay its workers last month, prompting U.N. and Western officials to warn that Arafat's government was effectively broke and at risk of disinte- grating. F M O TEX WASHINGTON Bush threatens action against strikes The White House said yesterday that President Bush would move to block strikes against four major airlines, citing concerns about "crippling the economy and the traveling public." White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said Bush would act if authorized b the National Mediation Board, which handles airline and railroad labor disputes. "He does not think four airlines striking at the same time, or any number of those airlines striking,would serve the public well or the economy well," Fleisch- er said. "He is prepared to act if he has the authority to act" After seeking a new contract for nearly five years, mechanics at Northwest Airlines, the nation's fourth-largest, were prepared to go on strike just after mid- night Monday. But Bush intervened last week, appointing an emergency board to mediate the matter. Fleischer brushed aside a reporter's suggestion that Bush's-threatened actions effectively rob unions of strikes as an option. Federal law "is bipartisan (and) provides for a cooling-off period in the ever of an impasse," he said. "And certainly, in the case of the Northwest strike, there was a multiyear impasse." LOS ANGELES Defense: Bombing suspect not a terrorist An Algerian who was arrested with a carload of explosives just before New Year's Eve 1999 went on trial yesterday on charges of plotting to bomb Seattle and other U.S. cities during the millennium celebrations. The arrest of Ahmed Ressam was "a law enforcement success story,0 case of a tragedy averted," federal prosecutor Steven Gonzalez told the jury in opening statements. Defense attorney Jo Ann Oliver countered that Ressam was unwittingly used as a courier for explosives. "This trial is not going to be about a terrorist bomber," the federal public defender said. "This is about a young man who fled war-torn Algeria ... a very quiet person, a religious person and probably a gullible person. He was used and evidently abused by his friends and left alone in the United States." Ressam was arrested on Dec. 14, 1999, in Port Angeles, Wash., after entering the country by ferry from Canada. Authorities said they found bomb-making materials, including explosives and timing devices, in his rental car. PARIS Foot-and-mouth spreads to Europe Foot-and-mouth disease has spread to continental Europe, with France announcing its first case of the highly contagious livestock ailment yesterday. Europe promptly moved to ban French livestock exports and the United States suspended import of animals and ani- mal products from the European Union. French officials set up a 11/2-mile security perimeter, limiting access to the farm in the Mayenne region, and a "surveillance perimeter" of six miles. Mainland Europe has been taking drastic steps to prevent the disease from crossing the Channel from Britain, where the outbreak discovered Feb. 19 has severely hurt the livestock industry. After the French announcement, the European Union veterinary panel met recommended a ban on the export of French livestock, including cattle, pigs, sheep, goats and other species at risk from the disease. JOHANNESBURG, South Africa President urged to declare emergency Opposition leaders said they would urge the president to invoke a state of emergency to give South Africans with HIV access to cheaper generic drugs. That won't happen, the country's health minister, Manto Tshabalala- Msimang, said yesterday. Invoking a state of emergency won't solve the dilemma, she said. "The issue of affordable medicines cannot be reduced to a one-dimension- al debate on declaring a national emer- gency to secure anti-retroviral drugs for AIDS management," she said. The intensity of the debate over declaring a state of emergency has shown how divided South Africa - with 10 percent of its 45 million citi- zens infected with HIV - remains * the AIDS issue. By 2010, the average life expectancy rate in South Africa is expected to drop to 36 because of the epidemic. NASHVILLE Gore begins lectures at Tenn. universities It's easy to tell when Professor * Gore is teaching - there's a motor- cade, Secret Service agents and stu- dents asking for autographs. The former vice president has embarked on a new career as an educator, and he's pushing a pet idea at two Tennessee universities - the connection between families and communities. He calls the sub- ject family-centered communi0 building, but even the professor himself is looking for a snappier name. What's it all about? In laymen's terms, it's the ways families help their hometowns and the way those towns help families. Or, as Gore describes it: "The whole is greater than the sum of its parts applies to families and com- munities." - Compiled from Daily wire repor9 What Do These Leaders Have in Common? "a lienitversityof Michigan Collgc of Pharmacy has bcen dedopi rg leadrs for powitions in healt care, biotech nology, 1ntiI neS, Pharma . , U Jsvesi vof sMkJ i +Cl >i~arCriaf Ppan, Govera Wons Corp. education engineering, law, the Pharmaceutical industry, andgther I's a maj or aSOn ou Co l ge s consistentl1v ranrked among the world's best. yoursel to find out kbout the great;, U-M ollegcof Pharmacy rduate. Visit our Web:pit at The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $100. Winter term (January through April) is $1.05, 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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