2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 11, 2002 Prn-k.raip1 'crn tfrr r4 i-Yr NP17 IT TlD Trv i j v -LkJi. c4iiLL ~P#JLLLoIIi ,.t,,111t01I.A3 1INLvv0u' -t~ riots from Pale stinian sup p orte rs Sharon agrees to negotiate truce with Arafat By JennifrwMisthal Daily Staff Reporter Twice yesterday, members of Stu- dents Allied for Freedom and Equal- ity protested the Israel Under the Lens conference outside the Michi- gan League. Armed with cardboard machine guns and sirens, SAFE performed skits about Israel's military checkpoints. SAFE member Fadi Kiblawi said Palestinians are stopped at these check- points and Israeli soldiers check their papers, which can take up to three hours to bypass. "People can get shot on sight if they take side routes (to avoid the checkpoints)," SAFE member Souzan Naser said. "Palestinians are differentiated by different color license plates," Naser added. Holding a megaphone, SAFE member Salah Husseini said the. checkpoint illustration must be brought to people's attention. He also said the checkpoints were examples of racism. Kiblawi called the rally a "big creative expression." He said he believed the conference attempted "ethnic cleansing through the mind." Rackham student Amenah Ibrahim, who also participated in the protest, said the rally was designed to protest the con- ference's keynote speaker, Israeli Air Force General Relik Shafir. "This general was funded to our campus with our tuition money," Ibrahim said. Ibrahim said she felt that earlier con- ference speakers had an objective view- point. But she said after listening to one speaker discuss the war on terrorism, her "blood was boiling." Still, Ibrahim said the conference was fair, despite a lack of Palestin- ian speakers. LSA junior and conference plan- ner David Post said the conference attempted to create an academic environment to discuss Israeli-Pales- tinian relations. "We tried to put speakers with a wide variety of views. We tried to cover as many points of view as possible," Post said. Engineering sophomore Maya Man- del disagreed with, SAFE members, say- ing she felt the conference was objective. "The conference presented other sides. People were really happy with what they heard," Mandel said. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said yesterday he is prepared to end Yasser Arafat's confinement in the West Bank and negotiate with the Palestinians on a truce, but with violence at its worst levels in 17 months of fighting, he stressed he will not call off the army offensive against militants. Sharon said Palestinian security forces had arrested the fifth and final suspect in the October slaying of Israeli Cabinet minister Rehavam Zeevi, fulfilling the condition for lifting a blockade that has kept Arafat under virtual house arrest in his compound in Ramallah in the West Bank since December. "People have been arrested. I demanded their arrest and their imprisonment" Sharon told a group of disabled war veterans. "I have said that after they are ested we shall let him out of there." He did not say when the Palestinian leader would be allowed to move about freely. Sharon spoke hours after Israeli helicopters pounded Arafat's Gaza Strip office to rubble, retaliation for a Palestinian suicide attack that killed 11 others near Sharon's Jerusalem residence. The Palestinian office in Gaza City had been evacuated before the helicopter attack, and no one was hurt. BAGRAM, Afghanistan Ground fighting slowing in Afghanistan Hundreds of weary U.S. soldiers descended from the Afghan mountains yesterday after a grueling eight-day battle against enemy holdouts. U.S. bombers pounded the caves where the remaining fighters were hiding. The Army said ground fighting was winding down but that Operation Anaconda would continue until the last of the al-Qaida and Taliban fighters had been killed or surrendered in the Shah-e-Kot mountains. About 400 U.S. troops returned to the Bagram air base north of Kabul yesterday in wave after wave of CH-47 Chinook helicopters. "We're home!" the soldiers shouted, offering high-fives to elated col- leagues. A few shook their heads in disbelief, grateful they had made it out alive. In Gardez, an Afghan commander, Ismail, said al-Qaida and Taliban forces in the area were "75 percent spent" and he expected a final push within the next two days. Coalition forces said they killed at least 500 fighters and that about 200 were believed left. Eight Americans and three of their Afghan allies died. JOHN PRATT/Daily Fadi Kiblawi, along with fellow protesters, acts as a soldier in a skit refusing admittance of a Palestinian ambulance, In front of the Michigan League yesterday, during the "Israel Under the Lens" conference. LSA freshman Samuel Botsford "Bipartisan views were expressed. said he felt the speakers tried to pres- Most speakers presented both sides of ent both viewpoints. the story efficiently," Botsford said. HEY MICHIGAN WOLVERINES, MAKE YOUR CLIMB TO THE TOP A WHOLE LOT SHORTER. START YOUR CAREER OFF AT A HIGHER LEVEL. Dynamic, cutting edge, revolutionizing the industry ... Were Quicken Loans, powered by Intuit, maker of Quicken and Turbo Tax"' the nation's leading online mortgage lender.You'll learn from the best in the business and experience unlimited growth opportunity, all in a great, casual environment. Get the "true to life" probability of earning $50,000 - $100,000 with world-class benefits including hefty stock options, 401(k), profit sharing, medical, dental and more. Send in your resume today! Excel at one of Fortune's 100 Best Companies to Work For in Livonia, Farmington Hills and Auburn Hills. Loans- 20555 Victor Parkway Livonia, MI 48152 FOE. Email: intuitjobs@intuit.com Fax:(734) 805-7052 www.quickenloans.com Phone:(800) 656-8863 WASHINGTON U.S. considers using nuclear weapons President Bush's top foreign-affairs advisers say the United States must be prepared to use nuclear weapons to deter attacks involving weapons of mass destruction. But in an effort to ease alarm overseas, they said there were no plans to do so. "We all want to make the use of weapons of mass destruction less like- ly," National Security Adviser Con- doleezza Rice said yesterday. "The way that you do that is to send a very strong signal to anyone who might try to use weapons of mass destruction against the United States that they'd be met with a devastating response." Secretary of State Colin Powell said the United States has never ruled out using nuclear weapons against a nuclear-armed enemy, a policy he said should deter any would-be attacker. "We think it is best for any potential adversary out there to have uncertainty in his calculus,"Powell said. WASHINGTON Enron is not another Whitewater scandal The Enron collapse is dangerous for Republicans. It fuels questions about influence-peddling in the White House. And it could raise election-year money for the party out of power. But even the most loyal Democrats concede one thing that Enron is not: The Bush administration's Whitewater. "1'm being very, very careful to say that it's not another Whitewater," said Rep. Henry Waxman, the Democrats' lead investigator into what the White House knew of the debacle, when, and how Enron may have influenced the administration's energy policy plans. Still, some Democrats say unan- swered questions could boost their party in the fall election. But so far, Democrats have not turned Enron into a buzzword for questionable presidential ethics, as Republicans were able to do with the Clintons' land deal. WASHINGTON Ridge announces new terror alert protocol Homeland Security Director Tom Ridge will soon make public a new ter- rorism alert system to grade threats by their seriousness and give states and cities more specific information. The new system is said to have sver- al alert levels, with the highest meaning an attack is considered imminent. The system is described as a response to complaints that the four broad terror alerts issued by the federal government in the months since the Sept. 11 attacks alarmed the public while providing little or no useful infor- mation. The White House confirmed pub- lished reports that Ridge and his staff are working with federal, state and local officials, police chiefs and sheriffs with the aim of making the alerts more useful. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. What Do These Leaders Have in Common? The University of Michigan College of Pharmacy has been developing leaders for positions in health care, biotechnology, 01 Gwendolyn Chivers, Chief Pharmacist, University of Michigan Health Service Gayle Crick, Manager, Global Marketing, Eli Lilly & Co. Cynthia Kirman, Manager, National Managed Pharmacy Program, General Motors Corp. business, education, engineering, law, the pharmaceutical industry, and other careers for 125 years. It's one reason our College is consistently ranked among the world's best. You owe it to yourself to find out about the outstanding, high-paying career opportunities available to U-M College of Pharmacy graduates. Visit our Web site at h ttn/hmmw umirh e-u/, 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 $105. Winter term (January through April) is $110, yearlong(September through April) is $190. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscrip- tions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Colle- giate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 764-0552; Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to letters@michigandaily.com. World Wide Web: www.michigandaily.com. EDITORIAL STAFF Jon Schwartz, Editor in Chief NEWS Lisa Koivu, Managing Editor EDITORS: Rachel Green, Usa Hoffman, Elizabeth Kassab, Jacquelyn Nixon STAFF: Jeremy Berkowitz, Kay Bhagat, Tyler Boersen, Ted Borden, Nick Bunkley, Anna Clark, David Enders, Margaret Engoren, Michael Gazdecki, Rahwa Ghebre-Ab, Annie Gleason, Rob Goodspeed, Christopher Johnson, C. Price Jones, Shabina S. Khatri, Kylene Kiang, Daniel Kim, Tomislav Ladika, Louie Meizlish, Jennifer Misthal, Shannon Pettypiece, Karen Schwartz, Jordan Schrader, Maria Sprow, Kara Wenzel CALENDAR: Shabina S. Khatri EDITORIAL Johanna Hanink, Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Aubrey Henretty, Jess Piskor, Manish RaiJI STAFF: Howard Chung, Rachel Fisher, Michael Grass, John Honkala, Adam Konner, David Livshiz, Garrett Lee, Kevin McNeil, Christopher Miller, Paul Neuman, Ari Paul, Zachary Peskowitz, Laura Platt, Rachel Roth, Lauren Strayer, CARTOONISTS: Sam Butler, Chip Cullen, Thomas Kuljurgis COLUMNISTS: Babawole Akin-Aina, Peter Cunniffe, Geoffrey Gagnon, David Horn, Yael Kohen, Jeremy W. Peters, Dustin J. Seibert, Nick Woomer, Amer G. Zahr SPORTS Steve Jackson, Managing Editor SENIOR EDITORS: Arun Gopal, David Horn, Jeff Phillips, Joe Smith NIGHT EDITORS: Chris Burke, Seth Klempner, Courtney Lewis, J. Brady McCollough, Kyle O'Neill, Naweed Sikora STAFF: Rohit Bhave, Dan Bremmer, Evan Brown, Eric Chan, Kareem Copeland, Raphael Goodstein, Josh Holman, Bob Hunt, Melanie Kebler, Shawn Kemp, Matt Kramer, David Oxfeld, Charles Paradis, Swapnil Patel, Dan Rosen, Mike Rosen, Brian Schick, Brian Steere, Jim Weber ARTS Lyle Henretty, Luke Smith, Managing Editors EDITOR: Jeff Dickerson WEEKEND EDITORS: Matt Grandstaff, Jane KrulI SUB-EDITORS: Ryan Blay, Keith Dusenberry, Caitlin Nish, Neal Pais, Jim Schiff, Andy Taylor-Fabe STAFF: Charity Atchison, Marie Bernard, Matthew C. Borushko, Rob Brode, Autumn Brown, Japiya Burns, Laura Deneau, Kiran Diwela, Will EI-Naohef, Jennifer Fogel, Ben Goldstein, Melissa Gollob, Nicholas Harp, Jenny Jeltes, Carmen Johnson, Christine Lasek, Rachel Lewis, Laura LoGerfo, Elizabeth Manasse, Beatrice Marovich, Taryn O'Leary, Gina Pensiero, Rebecca Ramsey, Darren Ringe, Dustin Seibert, Christian Smith, Todd Weiser, Janet Yang PHOTO David Katz, Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Danny Moloshok, Brett Mountain, Brendan O'Donnell, Alyssa Wood STAFF: Lauren Braun, Laurie Brescoll, Tom Feldcamp, Emma Fosdick, Patrick Jones, Ryan Leventhal, Kelly Lin, Debbie Mizel, John Pratt, David Rochkind, Jonathon Triest, Leslie Ward, Jessica Yurasek ONLINE Paul Wong, Managing Editor STAFF: Marc Allen, Soojung Chang, Chuck Goddeeris, Melanie Kebler, Timothy Najmolhoda BUSINESS STAFF Courtney Morales, Business Manager 01 Peter Labadie, President, Williams-Lahadie, LLC, a subsidiary of Leo Burnett Communications Albert Leung, President, Phyto-Technologies, Inc. Robert Lipper, Vice President, Bioph armaceutics R&D, Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., Pharmaceutical. Research Institute DISPLAY SALES Micah Winter, Manager ASSOCIATE MANAGER: Carrie Wozniak STAFF: Ayala Barkai, Brad Davies, Belinda Chung, Joanna Eisen, Laura Frank, Ellen Gagnet, Rebecca Goodman, Jennifer Kaczmarek, Zipo jLt, Julie Lee, Leslie Olinek, Anne Sause, Tarah Sason, Debbie Shapiro, Nicole Siegel, David Soberman, Ryan Zuckerman CLASSIFIED SALES Esther Choi, Manager ASSISTANT MANAGER: Jeffrey Valuck ir .r I" ,ra 1