2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 2, 2001 N ATION/WORLD S House passesGO seCUrty bil WASHINGTON (AP) - The House passed aviation security legislation yesterday after rejecting a Senate version that would have turned airport screening operations over to fed- eral employees. The vote was a major victory for the White House and its Republican allies. The bill, which takes steps to make airplanes and airports safer from attack, passed 286-139. It followed minutes after a crucial 218-214 vote to defeat the Senate-passed, Democratic- backed alternative. The Republican-backed bill would allow screening to be contracted out to private employers. "The Amnerican people deserve tough security standards and the House plan delivers," President Bush said in a statement. "I urge the House and Sen- ate to work together to send a strong and effective bill to my desk." The House action could delay for weeks enact- ing a wide-ranging package of new security measures aimned at restoring Americans' confi- dence in flying after terrorists hijacked four air- liners Sept. 11 and turned them into weapons of mass destruction. Lawmakers now face the task of trying to find a compromise with the Senate, which voted 100-0 three weeks ago to pass the measure making screeners federal employees. - "My greatest fear is that if it goes to a conference, it never comes out," House Democratic Leader Dick Gephardt said earlier yesterday. r I I - --- - - ----- I I I I I I ~o\o ~4. 0 4 'U I I I I I I I I Re Cih n Mideast EWSINBRIEF X> ANKARA, Turkey Turkey Commits troops to the war effort* Turkey became the first predominantly Muslim country yesterday to commit troops to the war in Afghanistan, saying it would send about 90 elite troops in response to a U.S. request. Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit said it would be "unthinkable for Turkey to stand back in the war against -terrorism," and that the troops would be sent to northern Afghanistan as soon as possible. Ecevit emphasized that the troops' primary role would be to help train forces of the Northern Alliance, the opposition coalition which is fighting the Taliban, as well as to offer humanitarian assistance. However, he did not rule out the pos- sibility that Turkish troops would see combat. "Our hope is that Turkish soldiers take part (only) in training and humanitari- an aid operations," he said. But he added that, " We may be faced with unknown and unwanted situations." Western military analysts say Turkey's 15 years of experience fighting a Kur- dish insurgency in the harsh mountain terrain of southeastern Turkey and Kur- dish-controlled northern Iraq could prove valuable against the Taliban. Foreign Minister Ismail Cem said entry of the Turkish forces would send a "message to everyone this is not a war against Islam," but against ter im WASH IINGTON r~nm Consumer spending pluminets after attacks Jarred by the terror attacks, consumers put away their wallets and credit6 cards last month as spending dropped by the largest amount in almost 15 years. M~anufacturing plunged, too, as evidence increased that economic fallout from the attacks probably has pushed the country into recession. Before the attacks, consumers, whose spending accounts for two-thirds of all eco- nomic activity, had been the main force keeping the economy afloat for more than a year. But spending declined by 1.8 percent in September as Americans stayed away from stores. With consumers ratcheting back their spending, manufacturers in October turned in their worst performance since January 1991, when the country was mired in its last recession. The National Association of Purchasing Management said manufactur- ing activity sank to 39.8 from 47 in September, the 15th consecutive6 month of decline. An index above 50 signifies growth in manufacturing, while a figure below 50 shows contraction. Manufacturers have been hardest hit by the economic slump. 0l15% off Aeris computers, fins, & B~s E20% off in-stock wetsuits 5mm & up 1Z30% off Citizen watches WlBonus savings on regulator sets lZSave big on closeout BCs & regs ~ZUsed equipment for sale, too! GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP)-- British Prime Minister Tony Blair urged the Muslim world to expel extremists andstoldsraeissandhPaletnians t the Middle East yesterday. But despite his call, violence contin- ued in the West Bank. In a targeted killing, Israeli helicopters fired missiles at a car near the city of Nablus, killing two Palestinians. The Israelis said they were about to carry out a suicide bomb attack. Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat charged that the Israeli operations were a crime and endangered peace efforts. Blair acknowledged the pressure Israel is facing, and at a news confer- ence following a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in Jerusalem, he listed Palestinian attacks tha kled dozens of Israelis and wound- However, he stressed that any response must be "measured and prop- er in accordance with international law." Sharon defended the practice of tar- geted killings, saying: "What will bring peace earlier -- that they kill another 30, 40, 50 Israeli citizens, or that they be stopped on their way there?" Israeli forces have arrested at least I ,40() Palestinians suspected of attacks during the past 13 months, Sharon aide Ranaan Gissin said. 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For more information or to schedule a campus visit, call the Office of Admissions at 1-800-488411, SKI. 409 or go on-line at www.nwbealtb.edu. SCOREKEEPERS N Ion-Ilome Games S $10BCL A DRINKS I II " 27 Taps! Full Menu! 750 cen 3SATURDAY M11AYNARD.-995.0100(21& OVER WITH PROPER ID) WASHINGTON Uited and Delta report heavy losses Due in large part to the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks and fueled by a con- tinuing decline of high-paying business travelers, United and Delta Air Lines reported staggering third quarter losses. The results, however, were not as bad as Wall Street analysts had predicted. Just four days after replacing then chief executive James E. Goodwin with board member John W Creighton, UAL lines reportdis biggest quary loss; in its 75-year history, of $1.15 billion, or $21.43 a share, compared with losses of $116 million, or $2.17 a share, for the siine period a year ago. United's losses were also the biggest of any major airline for the period. Arlington,. aa.based US Airways .Group Inc. -which United had tried to acquire earlier this year but abandoned after antitrust objections -- had the sec- ond biggest losses in the industry. WASHIINGTON - Bush makes progress on missile defense The United States and Russia are moving toward an agreement to slash their storehouses of nuclear weapons and to give President Bush a green light to push ahead with a missile-shield pro- gram. The target is a warheads cutback of about two-thirds, with each country restricted to no more than 1,750 to 2,250 strategic warheads, a senior White House official told The Associated Press. The current level is 6,000. Bush will play host to Russian Presi- dent Vladimir Putin in Washington and at his ranch in Crawford, Texas, Nov. 13-15. Weapons reduction and missile defense are at the top of the agenda. After a 3 1/2-hour meeting yesterday with Russian Foreign Minister Igor lvanov, Secretary of State Cohin Powell said, "We are looking forward to the two presidents having a very successful meeting." WASHINGTON Tribal leader begins fight against Taliban * A prominent Afghan tribal leader has begun the first known armed uprising against the Taliban in southern Afghanistan since the U.S.-led air strike campaign began, fighting off a Taliban attack Yesterday and clariig to control part of a southern province, according to his family and media reports. Hamid Karzai, an infiuefital igure from the leading ethnic Pashtun tribe, said he survived a Taliban attack on a meeting of tribal elders he convened in Uruzgan province, and that his forces captured 12 Taliban soldiers in the skir- msh. Karzai, who's close to Afghanistan's exiled former king Mohammed Zahir Shah, returned to Afghanistan last month to promote a national gathering aimed at form- ing a broad coalition government to replace the ruling Taliban, accord- ing to his brother, Qayum Karzai. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. Northwestern HeaLth Minneapolis, Minnesota Sciences University C~N NBC's Weakest Link IS HO0L DI NG A N O PEN CA LL A UDIT ION AT Dou ble tree H otel N ovi 27000iSheraton Drive SATURDAY NOVEMBER 3rd 12 NOON Auditions are on a first come first serve basis. We suggest that you arrive early. -p The IDepartment of Phik suphy A The Univ'ersity of Michigan , THE TANNRifl (5TUE ON VALUES 2001-02 Michael Fried H erbert Boone Professor of IHumnanities and - Director, Humanities C'enter The Johns Hopkins U nversty ~ "Roger Fry's Formalism" Friday, Novemnber 2, 4: 00 pn m Angell Hall Audltonrn A, 435 South State Street MICHAEL FRIED S THOMAS CROW students et the University of Michigan. 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