2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 2, 2001 NATION/WORLD MCCAIN Continued from Page 1 Schwarz, however, faces name recognition problems in his run, and one pundit, Bill Rustem, a senior vice president with Lansing- based think tank Public Sector Con- sultants, ventured so far as to say, "Dick Posthumus has pretty much got it locked up right now." Rustem said Posthumus has effectively used the perks and prominence of his office to meet with groups around the state and build up his name recognition. But Schwarz said enough Michi- gan voters will know who he is by next August for him to be a suc- cessful candidate. "I don't give a rip right now what my name recognition is," he said. Inside Michigan Politics Editor Bill Ballenger said that McCain's support is necessary for Schwarz to have a chance in the primary but cautioned it would by no means be enough for him. Everything else, he said, would have to go his way in order for the former Battle Creek mayor to win. "He's just not a great campaigner," he said. Democrats face an even more divided primary. In that race, for- mer Gov. James Blanchard will face state Attorney General Jennifer Granholm, U.S. Rep. David Bonior of Mt. Clemens and state Sens. Gary Peters of Bloomfield Town- ship and Alma Wheeler Smith of Salem Township. Rustem said Schwarz, in order to win, would have to convince a number of Democrats and independents to vote. AID Continued from Page 1 activities. The administration is meantime seeking to navigate other legal restrictions on providing assistance to several crucial allies in any military campaign, Pakistan in particular. Though Islamabad remains under U.S. sanctions imposed when its democratically elected government was ousted in a 1999 military coup, the administration has already provided an initial infusion of cash to Pakistan, which has been loud- ly applauded by the United States for cooperating in the anti-terrorist effort. The administration has waived three other sets of sanc- tions placed on Pakistan because of its nuclear weapons program and is now waiting for the final restrictions to be lifted by Congress before offering a major aid package. That $600 million economic support program, being assembled by U.S. officials, would be offered once Con- gress acts on a bill introduced by Sen. Sam Brownback (R- Kan.), waiving sanctions placed on Pakistan after the 1999 coup. These restrictions bar the United States from provid- ing economic and military assistance to Islamabad. A spokesman for Brownback said the measure is now pending before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, where action could come this week. Some members of Congress want the aid package, likely to be provided over several years, to finance schools, roads and other infrastructure, while the administration would rather provide Pakistan with budget support, said a Bush official. Bush gave Pakistan an initial S50 million installment last week, the maximum allowed each year under the remaining sanctions. But since the federal government began a new fiscal year yesterday, officials said they expect Bush to sign off on another $50 million in the coming days. In further American largess, the administration last week reached agreement with Pakistan on rescheduling $379 mil- lion in debt to the U.S. government. This step came after U.S. officials indicated in January they would reschedule this por- tion of Pakistan's $2.7 billion debt to the United States once Islamabad completed an economic reform program under the supervision of the International Monetary Fund. The IMF gave its blessing last week to Pakistan's perfor- mance and approved a $135 million loan for Islamabad. This represented the third and final portion of a $596 mil- lion stand-by loan with the fund. UN Continued from Page 1 against terrorism," said Iraq's U.N. Ambassador Mohammed Al-Douri. The Palestinian U.N. observer said the mayor's tough words might have drawn a negative reaction were he not speaking against the backdrop of the devastation in lower Manhattan. "No state would hesitate in expressing a clear-cut position against international terrorism, and in favor of the fight. The sympathy was clear," said Nasser al- Kidwa, the Palestinian representative. Normally slow to act, the General Assembly and the Security Council immediately condemned the attacks, and the council moved rapidly to adopt a U.S.-sponsored resolution on Friday which requires all 189 U.N.-member nations to deny money, support and sanctuary to terrorists. Under the resolution, all countries must make the "willful" financing of terrorism a criminal offense, immediate- ly freeze terrorist-related funds, deny terrorists "safe haven," and speed the exchange of information, especially on terrorist acts and movements. New U.S. Ambassador John Negro- po te, in his first U.N. speech, called for swift implementation of the resolution. He also reissued U.S. charges that Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida group was behind the suicide hijackings that hit the Trade Center and the Pentagon. More than 6,000 people from 80 countries died in the attacks. "We cannot let them act together, we NEWS IN BRIEF... y H E ADL INES F ROM A ROU ND T H E W..$L WASHINGTON Fed expected to cut interest rates The Federal Reserve, faced with an America gripped by fears of more terror- ist attacks, is expected today to push a key interest rate to its lowest level in four decades in an effort to get consumers spending again. In the wake of the worst terrorist attacks in U.S. history, consumer confidence has plunged by the largest amount since the Persian Gulf War, an ominous development given that consumer spending accounts for two-thirds of total eco- nomic activity. Wall Street, after two weeks of volatile trading, took a breather yesterday, awaiting the Fed's next move. The Dow Jones industrial average closed down 10.73 points at 8,836.83. Both of the major readings of consumer sentiment - done by the Conference Board in New York and the University of Michigan - show that confidence has been badly jolted by the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. The Conference Board reading fell by 14.4 percent in September, taking the largest one-month tumble since October 1990, when the United States was preparing to go to war against Iraq following its invasion of Kuwait. The University of Michigan index of consumers' expectations about the future fell to 73.5, a plunge of 13.7 percent from the August reading. WASHINGTON Bush to reopen Reagan National Airport President Bush has decided to reopen Reagan National, the only airport still closed three weeks after the Sept. I 1 terrorist attacks, a White House official said yesterday. But the airport closest to the U.S. capital will face some of the stiffest security measures in the nation, including new flight patterns that take planes away from national landmarks such as the Capitol, lawmakers and aviation sources said. Bush's decision came after a White House meeting yesterday with Virginia lawmakers of both parties, who told him that permanently closing Reagan National would cost their state billions of dollars. "Closing the airport is a multibillion-dollar proposition at this point, and I don't think that anybody wants to go there," Rep. Tom Davis (R-Va.), who repre- sents a nearby suburban district, said after meeting with Bush. Other members of Congress, many of whom fly from the airport to their home districts, also had urged the administration to keep the facility open. While an announcement from the president is expected as early as today, bringing the airport back to life could take from several days to more than a week, lawmakers said. 4 cannot let them act alone, we cannot let them act at all," he said. "Freedom - the first value of the new millennium - is worth the price of vigilance and more." Giuliani said he believes the increase in terrorism and terrorist groups over the past 15 years is a response to the spread of freedom and democracy to many nations. "Our freedom threatens them, because they know that if our ideas of freedom gain a foothold among their people it will destroy their power. So they strike out against us to keep those ideas from reaching their people." Secretary-General Kofi Annan warned the world body against letting slip the unity forged among members after the attacks. ir Take it to the extreme ... with a career at Quicken Loans! 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Quicken Loans - 20555 Victor Parkway -Livonia, MI 48152 - Email: intuitiobs@intuit.com - Fax: (734) 805-7052 - www.quickenloans.com WASHINGTON High court won't hear profiling case The Supreme Court, showing little interest in the issue of racial profiling, refused yesterday to hear a challenge to a-small New York town's decision to stop and question every young black man in the area as police looked for a crime suspect who was black. The court also turned away a job bias claim from a Muslim woman who says her boss at a rental car agency told her she could not wear a full head scarf while serving customers. She later quit and sued the company for discrimination based on her religion. The two cases were among more than 1,800 the court dismissed as it opened its new term. Since the Sept. I1 terror attacks, President Bush and Attorney General John Ashcroft, among others, have been quick to say that racial profiling and religious discrimination are wrong and should not be tolerated. JERUSALEM Peres criticizes ann for ignoring cease re Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres lashed out at his nation's military yester- day, accusing a senior officer of wanting to assassinate Palestinian Authority Pres- ident Yasser Arafat, as violence threat- ened to torpedo the cease-fire announced last week. Since Peres and Arafat agreed to the cease-fire Wednesday, at least 18 Pales- tinians have died and more than 200 have been wounded in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. More than a dozen Israelis have been wounded. Palestinians have fired mortar shells at Israeli settlements, held large-scale demonstrations and clashed with troops. Yesterday morning, a car bomb exploded in a busy Jerusalem neighborhood. At a Cabinet meeting Sunday, the Israeli government decided to give Arafat just 48 more hours to enforce the cease-fire before reassessing its own commitment to the truce. ST. PAUL, Minn. 28,000 workers walk off the job in ste The state's two largest public employee unions went on strike yester- day in a dispute over wages and health benefits, idling as many as 28,000 employees. Involving about half the state's workers, the strike would be the largest government work stoppagein the state's history and the first since a 22- day strike in 1981. Employees involved in the action included highway maintenance work- ers, tax collectors, janitors, office clerks and parole officers. Those unaf- fected included state police officers, prison guards, state college teachers and forest firefighters "We're asking all of our bargaining units and members to withhold their services as of today," said Murray Cody, a spokesman for the 10,500- member Minnesota Association of Professional Employees. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 1 l1 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 US. 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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