Another Isreali-Arab peace talk disintegrates ■ Conflict arises over the details of an agreed pull out from West Bank. EREZ CROSSING, Gaza Strip (AP) - Less than a month after one much-touted Israeli-Arab peace ini tiative crumbled, another dissolved Thursday into mutual recriminations - and the comprehensive Mideast peace Prime Minister Ehud Barak promised by year’s end seems further away than ever. Palestinians said peace talks were in “crisis” after Barak refused to budge on terms for an interim territo ry withdrawal during a tense two hour summit with Yasser Arafat at this Israeli military outpost on the Israel-Gaza border. Jt was the second peace blow for Barak in three weeks - talks with Syria went into deep freeze in mid January -and hes scrambled to deflect Palestinian talk <$fWtfcad end. “I am convinced that this barrier will be overcome,” Barak told senior officials of his Labor Party. “There is a deep interest by both sides.” The Palestinians want the pullout from 6.1 percent of the West Bank outlined in an interim agreement signed in September to include popu lous Arab suburbs of Jerusalem. The Israelis refuse, at least for now. “Once the confidence and credi bility and integrity of the peace process become absent, the element of trust disappears and both sides find themselves in a crisis situation, and that’s where we are now,” lead Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said in an interview. Israel says it alone determines what land goes back in the with drawals, although it will take Palestinian considerations into account. Barak is concerned the Palestinians will use total control of the suburbs, currently under joint control, as the first stake in a claim to Jerusalem, the city both sides claim as their capital. Erekat said Arafat suggested using U.S. Mideast peace envoy Dennis Ross, who is in the region, as an arbitrator. “We hope that through the good ^ lam convinced that this barrier will be overcome. There is a deep interest by both sides.” Ehud Barak Israeli prime minister offices of the American administra tion ... we can restore the confidence and credibility,” he said. Barak’s Foreign Minister David Levy rejected that idea, accusing the Palestinians of engineering the dis pute in order to invite U.S. interven tion. “No outside force can do the work • instead of us,” Levy said, pledging the pullout would go ahead next week as planned. “No one can do this instead of the sides.” Both the Israelis and Palestinians see President Clinton as eager for a legacy as his presidency winds down and likely to press Israel into conces sions. i Tonight and Tomorrow Night Lir Ed and the Blues Imperials v. .wr 11:00-1:00 a m ll a.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday-Tnursday 11 a.m. to 12 P-m. Friday and Saturday Happy Hour 4-7 Monday thru Friday. Free hors d’oeuvres today during Happy Hour! Located at 70th and Adams 466-6679 Speaker: Holocaust taught no lessons HOLOCAUST from page 1 it,” he said. But Novick was hesitant on using history to teach lessons. “Along with most historians, I’m skeptical with most lessons of histo ry” Novick also condemned the role that the Holocaust plays in American politics. “Whatever the larger lesson is from the Holocaust, many say it sensi tizes us,” Novick said. He refuted this notion by examin ing the conflicts in Cambodia, Somalia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Kosovo. “Never again came to mean never again if American troops are at risk, and it’s not in national interest,” Novick said. Novick said that after the recent conflict in Kdsovo, many politicians had claimed that humanity had finally learned the lesson of the Holocaust. “I am, on various grounds, still skeptical,” he replied. “The universal lesson of never again is something that American pol itics have yet to put in practice.” Novick also questioned the cur rent method of teaching the I Holocaust. “The push behind teaching the Holocaust is that an encounter is sure to install moral exhibitions,” he said. “The ” understanding of the Holocaust has been skewed among the American public because of the lessons pounded along with it.” In addition, Novick said that requiring the Holocaust to be taught may not always be wise. In the right environment, he said, it can be a life-changing experience. On the other hand, forcing the Holocaust into curriculums can be cumbersome for uninterested students and teachers. Following the lecture, Novick answered questions from a nearly filled auditorium. During this time, a man dissemi nated literature calling the Holocaust a hoax. When this was brought to his attention, Novick responded by saying that “these malicious fruitcakes are indeed irritating and infuriating. “The best thing to do would have been to ignore him.” After the man waited through about 45 minutes of discussion, he questioned the existence of the Holocaust out loud. M lam, on various grounds, sft’// skeptical” Peter Novick University of Chicago history professor In response, Peter Novick said: “I really don’t think this is productive.” The man dismissed Novick’s response. Novick then promptly asked the man to leave. Loud applause fol lowed, even though the man refused to leave. His continued presence caused shouts from the crowd, resulting in the conclusion of the forum. “I didn’t lose friends, family and relatives to listen to a goddamn Nazi like that,” another man in the audience responded. | Despite the outburst, many people lingered to talk with Novick. “The biggest thing I got from the forum was that while we hastily con demn the actions of the Germans dur ing the Holocaust, we willingly do similar things everyday,” said Kathy Babcock, a junior history major. • C* ' J -- TEAMWORK]——I HBE is a major force in the engineering, architecture, design and construction industries. As leaders In the design and construction of healthcare facilities, ’ ’ ■ J I banks and credit unions, we have completed projects in 49 of the 50 United States. HBE also applies its Design-Build approach to the Adam’s Mark luxury convention hotel chain, a subsidiary of HBE. Because of our contli qualified people with management. 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