2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, February 19, 2002 NATION/WORLD Seven killed in Mideast attacks JERUSALEM (AP) - Palestinian militants staged a tried to infiltrate a Jewish settlement and soldiers nearby Dir al-Balah, a Palestinian -city, Palestinians TOKYO series of attacks yesterday, leaving seven dead as Yasser opened fire on them, the military said. Palestinians said said. Four people were wounded. The military had no Arafat praised a tentative proposal in which the entire one of the gunmen was killed. immediate comment. Bush stresses econom ic ties wi Japan " Arab worl w a , l ~a eae ith TC'AI .l ,,i h Th . I t ,,li..:i a 1n.i:-- ----- 1 ,. 4 t rucv viu wuj imupau wi isran m excnange for a total pullout from the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem. Israeli F-16 warplanes later responded to the attacks, striking Palestinian security buildings in the Gaza city of Rafah, witnesses said. Israeli planes also hit a Pales- tinian police building in the West Bank town of Ramal- lah, the Israeli military said. There were no immediate reports of casualties. The Israeli military had no imme- diate comment on the air strike in Gaza. In the earlier Gaza violence, two armed Palestinians ie israen miitary said alestimans also opened fire on an Israeli vehicle near Gaza's Kissufim crossing into Israel, and then a suicide bomber blew himself up. Israeli officials said three Israelis and the bomber were killed and four people were wounded. The Al Aqsa Brigades, a militia linked to Arafat's Fatah group, took responsibility for the attack on the vehicle in a phone call to The Associated Press in Gaza, and identified the attacker as Mohammed Kass- er, 22, of Gaza City. After the attack, Israeli tanks fired on houses in Elsewhere, police spotted a suspicious car and stopped it on the highway between Jerusalem and the West Bank's Jordan Valley. Police commander Shahar Ayalon said the driver got out of the car, and as police "pulled out their guns, he activated the car bomb by remote control." The attacker and a policemen were killed, and another policeman was slightly injured. Israel again blamed Arafat for the violence. "It has now become a daily event," said Israeli Foreign Min- istry official Arie Mekel. "We certainly see an escala- tion planned by the Palestinian Authority and Arafat." From the playground of ancient archers to the cozy dinner table of a "yakitori" restaurant, President Bush celebrated the United States' partnership with Japan but also underscored that as its troubled economy goes, so goes Asia - and America. "It is important for the world's second-largest economy to grow. It will help the region and it will help the world," Bush said yesterday at a joint news conference with Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi. In three hours of private talks, Bush also addressed Japan's unease about murky U.S. intentions toward Iraq, Iran and North Korea - the trio Bush has defined as the "axis of evil." Bush said he told Koizumi "all options are on the table," presumably including military action to shut down those countries' terrorist networks and programs devel- oping weapons of mass destruction. "Other than that, there's nothing else to talk about," Bush said bluntly. He added that his wish is to "resolve all issues peacefully." Without mentioning any specific target beyond Afghanistan, Koizumi said through a translator: "This fight against terrorism is not going to be a short one.... Japan shall continue to support the United States." KABUL, Afghanistan Allies assist Afghans in making pilgnimmage* Afghan officials, aided by planes sent from Britain, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, scrambled yesterday to take would-be pilgrims to the annual pilgrimage in Mecca. A lack of flights has blocked thousands from making the journey, stirring anxiety in a nation struggling to consolidate a shaky peace. In Pakistan, police found four rockets aimed at Karachi International Airport a half mile from Terminal One, which is used by the U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan, according to Waqar Mulan, an airport security official. Police suspected Islamic extremists were responsible. Mulan said the Chinese-made rockets were equipped with homemade launchers and a timing device for automatic firing. Two of the rockets were aimed at the airport terminal used as a transport and supply hub for the coalition and two at an airport hotel used as a barracks by coalition forces, police said. The city's bomb squad defused the rockets, Mulan added. Karachi's police chief, Kamal Shah, said he doubted the rockets would have done much damage. i UNVERSITY OF CA LIFOR NA, BERKELEY SUMMER SESSIONS L. -SO Y / N 'I ...... WHERE WILL YOU BE THIS SUMMER? VISIT DISTANT PLA CES E:j~~ A LR NU NIRSI TY CR EiD! T OPI)PEN EINR OL LA'E~NT ° tCOBNE'H3l TR A VE:L, Af)VENTUR, E 1 A ND.\) A C4 E)IMJCS FINANClA L AID IS A VAILABLE 11 HOUSTON Yates' lawyer claims she was delusional Andrea Yates had a history of sui- cide attempts and was so psychotic that her delusions drove her to drown her children in their bathtub, a defense attorney told jurors yesterday as her capital murder trial got under way. Prosecutors agreed she suffered from a mental illness but contended Yates was well aware her actions were wrong when she held each of her children beneath water until they could no longer breathe. Defense attorney George Parnham said his client suffered from postpar- tum depression with psychotic fea- tures, "the cruelest and most severe of mental illnesses." "It takes the very nature and essence of motherhood - to nurture, to protect and to love - and changes the reality," e said. CHICAGO United, mechanics agree on contract United Airlines announced a tentative contract agreement with the union repre- senting its 12,800 mechanics and aircraft cleaners yesterday, less than 36 hours before a strike deadline. The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers scheduled a March 5 ratification vote by mechanics on an agreement it said includes improvements on retroactive pay and retirement benefits. The announcement came on the fourth day of urgent talks following the mechanics' rejection of United's contract offer last Tuesday. The mechanics were@ preparing to walk off the job at 12:01 a.m. EST tomorrow if no settlement were reached. Chief union negotiator Scotty Ford said the agreement would give United mechanics the industry-leading contract they have been seeking. NOBLE, G. Cremator arrested for second time Grim-faced investigators yesterday unearthed dozens more corpses scattered around a northwest Georgia crematory, finding skeletons sealed in vaultgnd bodies that had been dragged into a shed. The count rose to 130. Forensics teams said they had identi- fied 22 bodies, and agents warned they expected to find many more. "I can't even begin to guess what the total will be," said Dr. Kris Sperry, the state's chief medical examiner. Ray Brent Marsh, operator of Tri-State Crematory in this rural town 20 miles south of Chattanooga, Tenn., was arrest- ed. for a second time and authorities filed 11 new theft-by-deception charges against him, bringing the total to 16. Marsh, 28, had been arrested Saturday and was released from jail Sunday on $25,000 bond. He was back in Walker County jail yesterday. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. (3 J C P evc , \(?*r&clo sro~rnd y awa........... 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