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September 27, 2001 - Image 2

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The Michigan Daily, 2001-09-27

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2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 27, 2001

NATION/WORLD

Peres, Arafat in truce tal

GAZA INTERNATIONAL AIR-
PORT, Gaza Strip (AP) - In truce
talks held at the urging of the United
States, Israel and the Palestinians
agreed yesterday on a series of confi-
dence-building measures aimed at
ending a year of fighting.
The two sides said they wou.ld
resume security coordination and exert
maximum efforts to enforce a cease-
fire. In a first gesture, Israel was to
ease security closures that have severe-
ly disrupted daily life in the Palestin-
ian areas.
Violence continued even as the two

leaders met, underscoring the fragility
of a truce. Just three miles from the
meeting site, a 16-year-old Palestinian
boy was killed and I1 youngsters were
wounded when Israeli troops fired on a
crowd of stone-throwers. Earlier, three
Israeli soldiers were wounded when
Palestinians set off an explosion at an
army post in the same area.
Both sides approached the talks
with great skepticism.
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
has been reluctant to allow the meeting
to proceed. Sharon has portrayed
Arafat as an unrepentant terrorist and

said he could not be trusted. The
Palestinians, in turn, have been con-
cerned that Peres, the leading dove in
Sharon's government, only has a limit-
ed mandate.
A major test of the truce will come
tomorrow when Palestinians plan to
mark the first anniversary of the fight-
ing with marches across the West
Bank and Gaza Strip. Traditionally,
such marches have ended in confronta-
tions with Israeli troops.
The United States hopes to calm the
Mideast conflict, which threatens to
get in the way of coalition-building

efforts for the U.S.-ledf
international terrorism.
U.S. Secretary of Statet
repeatedly called Arafat a
recent days, urging them
talks. Sharon canceled t
sessions, arguing Arafat w
hard enough to contain vi
Previous truce deals, in
negotiated by CIA chiefG
have collapsed. However
some hopes the curren
would stick. Neither Shar
apparently wants to be se
Washington at a time of cri

Giuliani not read y to leave y

NEW YORK (AP) - Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said
yesterday he will talk to the city's candidates for mayor
and try to come up with a plan that would give him a
continuing role in New York's recovery from the World
Trade Center disaster.
Giuliani was not specific about whether he was
seeking some kind of extension of his term, consider-
ing a run for a third term, or merely looking for a role
in the administration of his successor
"I want to do something that unifies the city because
I love this city," said Giuliani, who is barred under the
City Charter from serving a third term when his cur-

rent term is up on Dec. 31.
In yet another indication of Giuliani's intentions, the
Republican mayor contacted the Democratic speaker
of the state Assembly yesterday, seeking support for
legislation that could extend his stay in office.
Giuliani's remarks came one day after New Yorkers
voted in the primary election, handing billionaire
media mogul Michael Bloomberg the GOP nomina-
tion for mayor and sending two Democrats, Bronx
Borough President Fernando Ferrer and Public Advo-
cate Mark Green, into a runoff next month.
Green was the only Democratic candidate to meet

with Giuliani yesterday; Bloomberg re
whether he had met with the mayor. None
dates had any comment on Giuliani's rem
The mayor has been acclaimed for his s
ship since the trade center attack and ha
by many New Yorkers to stay on and g
through the crisis. His aides are said to b
way to extend his term or lift the two-ter
gether.
In an interview set for broadcast last n
said that if New Yorkers want him to stay
end of his term, he is available.

'I

M

This Weekend in
Michigan Athletics

Presented by: iseritech.

Aim k'

I ,jTy~,,T;, ~"'&J~~ I I

KNOW c
NEWS?
E-MAIL
day nesws@un

Volleyball
Friday, Sept. 28
U-M vs. Iowa
7 p.m.
"Rock the House"
Free t-shirts to the first
500 fans!
Saturday, Sept. 29
U-M vs. Minnesota
7 p.m.
Home matches at Cliff Keen Arena.
Admission is $4 for adults; $2 for
children and senior citizens.
U-M students admitted for FREE!
Men's Golf
Wolverine Invitational
Friday, Sept. 28 9 a.m.
Sunday, Sept. 30 8 a.m.
University of Michigan Golf Course

Men's Soccer
Friday, Sept. 28
U-M vs. Dayton
7 p.m. at
Pioneer High School
Sunday, Sept. 30
U-M vs. Western Michigan
3:30 p.m.
U-M Soccer Field
(State Street)
Admission is FREE!
Hockey
Friday, Sept. 28
Blue-White
intrasquad Game
7:35 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 30
U-M vs. Queens (exh.)
2:05 p.m.

-I

Attention

CHORAL SIN(
You are invited to jo
University Musical
CHORAL I
Thomas Sheets, con
2001-2002 Seas

S NEWS IN BRIEF
HEADLINES FROM AROUND THE WORLD
fight against Carpooling mandated in Manhattan
Colin Powell Mayor Rudolph Giuliani detailed dramatic new traffic restrictions yesterday,
nd Sharon in saying they had been suggested before the World Trade Center attack but would
to hold the be added now because of security concerns.
wo previous Single-occupant passenger vehicles will be barred in Manhattan below 62nd
vas not trying Street, the mayor said. He said the measure would be tested today, on the Jewish
olence. holiday of Yom Kippur, because "traffic will be lighter and we'll see how it
ncluding one works."
eorge Tenet, Giuliani said the restrictions were due in part to unspecified security concerns.
r, there were He also said they may help reduce traffic jams that have snarled the city since
t cease-fire the Sept. I1 attack.
on nor Arafat The restrictions appear to be an effort to reduce traffic volume. With secu-
en as defying rity checkpoints in and around the city, some traffic delays have lasted for
isis. hours.
Security in the city was increased Tuesday shortly before Attorney General
John Ashcroft told Congress that terrorists may be planning an attack using a
truck carrying hazardous chemicals. Asked about reports that specific threats
had been made against the city, Giuliani said "Sometimes they're credible,
sometimes they're not."
CINCINNATI
fused to say
ofthe candi- Jury acquits officer in black man's death
arks.
teady leader- A white police officer was acquitted yesterday in the killing of an unarmed black
s been urged man that sparked the city's worst racial unrest in three decades.
uide the city Officer Stephen Roach had been charged with negligent homicide and obstructing
e exploring a official business after he shot Timothy Thomas, 19, in a dark alley early on April 7.
nm limit alto- Hamilton County Municipal Judge Ralph E. Winkler pronounced sentence after
hearing the trial without a jury, at Roach's request. The officer did not testify.
ight, Giuliani "This shooting was a split-second reaction to a very dangerous situation created
y on past the by Timothy Thomas," Winkler said. "Police Officer Roach's action was reasonable
on his part, based on ... the information he had at the time in that dark Cincinnati
alley."
He said Roach's record was unblemished, while Thomas' was not, and noted that
F Thomas failed to respond to an order to show his hands. Thomas had been wanted
on a variety of warrants.
The Rev. Damon Lynch, a black leader and minister in the Over-the-Rhine neigh-
borhood where Thomas was shot, called the verdict "an atrocity" but said, "We'll
urge people to be peaceful, as we have been doing for 10 weeks."
sT. PAUL, Minn. Albanian guerrillas. It also broke the
IdceiU _cycle of violence that had gripped the
Gov. calls up troops country for seven months.
In case of strike However, its larger and more impor-
tant goal was the creation of a political
Two unions representing nearly climate for the Macedonian parliament
28,000 Minnesota state workers to implement a Western-brokered peace.
have voted overwhelmingly to go plan and for displaced citizens to return
GERS on strike, and Gov. Jesse Ventura totheirhomes.
has ordered the National Guard to On those issues, the outcome is far
in the be ready to fulfill vital functions if from clear. The parliament has yet to
they do. complete work on reforms called for
I Society The walkout deadline was pushed under the agreement.
from Sept. 17 to Oct. 1 because of the
terrorist attacks, which also have tem- VIENNA
ductor pered some support for a strike.
Last-ditch talks resume today on two- OPEC postpones
on year contracts for the workers, who action until today 4
make up more than half of the state
Ann Arbor sO work force. Their former contracts
Francisco SO expired June 30. OPEC delegates broke off informal
""^roitSO In landslide votes a few weeks talks yesterday without agreeing
ago, members of the American Fed- whether the oil producers' cartel should
eration of State, County and adjust output, highlighting their dilem-
does it all! Municipal Employees Council 6 ma of trying to reverse a slide in crude
omas Sheets, and the Minnesota Association of prices without worsening the global
ion appears Professional Employees gave the economic slowdown.
with major go-ahead for strikes. Representatives of the Organization
in critically of Petroleum Exporting Countries
of choral SKOPJE, Macedonia delayed a formal meeting on the group's
oncert Choir production and pricing policy until this
res; and our NATO SaysB alkan morning.
will appear say
ert with tl c a"No agreement yet," OPEC Presi-
is Scholars. dent Chakib Khelil said as he left the
As NATO troops begin to leave hotel where the two-hour talks took
ation about Macedonia today at the end of a one- place.
. Rehearsals month mission to disarm rebels, However, OPEC delegates were
rn Language uncertainty prevails over the country's meeting late yesterday with officials
on Monday peace process. - from eight non-OPEC oil producing
9:30 pm. The mission, which NATO Secretary- countries, including Mexico, Russia and
s! General George Robertson this week Angola, at OPEC's headquarters in.
called "a resounding success," collected Vienna, Austria.
97 3,875 weapons, along with mines, explo-
nich.edu sives and ammunition, from ethnic - Compiledfrom Daily wire reports.

alunion.htnil
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ONLINE Paul Wong, Managing Editor
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Corne 3SIES TF MrlsBsiesMaae
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o r to r CLASSIFIED SALES Esther Choi, Manager

Handel: Messiah
Ives: Symphony No. 4
Brahms: German Requiem
Beethoven: Miss~a Solemnis

San

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I

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Under the leadership of Th
the 135-voice Choral Un
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acclaimed performances
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internationally famed Talli
Contact us now for inform
our singer-friendly auditions
are held in the U-M Modet
Building, Auditorium #4,
evenings from 7:00 -
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Office: 734.763.89
E-mail: choralunion@ur
Website: www.ums.org/chora

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